Grammar and expressions
no part of speech | none |
-daneundeya
An expression used to indicate that, based on what the speaker heard, the speaker had to say the following thing under the circumstances.
no part of speech | none |
-daneundeyo
(informal addressee-raising) An expression used to give the speaker's opinion indirectly, by conveying what the speaker heard.
no part of speech | none |
-dani
An expression used to indicate that the speaker is surprised or impressed by the explanation or statement heard.
-dani
An expression used to indicate that the explanation or statement heard is the basis for the speaker's judgment.
no part of speech | none |
-dani
(informal addressee-lowering) An expression used to ask the listener about what another person said.
no part of speech | none |
-danikka
An expression used to quote the speaker's or another person's remarks as the reason or basis for the following statement.
no part of speech | none |
-danikkaneun
(informal addressee-lowering) An expression used to stress the speaker's position or opinion, when the speaker is asked or requested repeatedly.
-danikkaneun
An expression used to stress that the speaker is quoting the speaker's or another person's remarks as a reason or basis.
no part of speech | none |
-danikkayo
(informal addressee-raising) An expression used when the speaker emphasizes his/her remark while reconfirming what was said earlier.
no part of speech | none |
-danikkan
(informal addressee-lowering) An expression used to stress the speaker's position or opinion, when the speaker is asked or requested repeatedly.
-danikkan
An expression used to stress that the speaker is quoting remarks of the speaker or another person's as a reason or basis.
no part of speech | none |
-daniyo
(informal addressee-raising) An expression used to indicate that the speaker is surprised or impressed by something, because it is unexpected.
no part of speech | none |
-dadeogun
(informal addressee-lowering) An expression used to convey a newly learned fact to the listener.
no part of speech | none |
-dadeogunyo
(informal addressee-raising) An expression used to convey a newly learned fact to the listener.
no part of speech | none |
-dadeonya
(formal, highly addressee-lowering) An expression used to question what is being stated, hinting strongly that the opposite is true.
-dadeonya
(formal, highly addressee-lowering) An expression used to ask the listener about what the listener saw or heard.
no part of speech | none |
-dadeoni
An expression used to mention something the speaker knows from having heard it and connect this to the following content.
-dadeoni
An expression used to quote and confirm a well-known maxim, etc.
no part of speech | none |
-dadeora
(formal, highly addressee-lowering) A sentence-closing ending used when the speaker conveys what he/she heard to the listener.
no part of speech | none |
-dadeorago
(informal addressee-lowering) An expression used to say something the speaker remembers from having heard it in person.
no part of speech | none |
-dadeon
(formal, highly addressee-lowering) An expression used to ask the listener about what the speaker thinks the listener knows.
-dadeon
(formal, highly addressee-lowering) An expression used to strongly deny, repulse, or question the preceding content.
-dadeon
An expression used to remember what the speaker heard in the past and modify the following content.
no part of speech | none |
-dadeon-ga
(formal, moderately addressee-lowering) An expression used to ask the listener something to check.
-dadeon-ga
An expression used to talk to oneself or try to remember while looking back on the past.
no part of speech | none |
-dadeonde
An expression used to mention what the speaker heard from another person and relate it to the following content.
-dadeonde
(informal addressee-lowering) An expression used to indirectly express what the speaker wants to say, by conveying what the speaker heard, in an unfinished sentence.
no part of speech | none |
-dadeondeyo
(informal addressee-raising) An expression used to indirectly express what the speaker wants to say, by conveying what the speaker heard, in an unfinished sentence.
no part of speech | none |
-dade
(formal, moderately addressee-lowering) An expression used to repeat what the speaker heard, as it is.