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Counting in Korean: Native Korean System

There are 2 ways of counting numbers in Korean. We have the Sino-Korean counting system, then the Native Korean counting system. These two have different uses. 

The Native Korean numbers are used for counting from 1-99. While the Sino-Korean counting which was based on Chinese numbers are used for dates, phone numbers, and numbers above 100.

In this article, you'll be able to learn the numbers, their counting units, and how to use them.

Let's begin with the Native Korean counting system.

By memorizing the numbers above, you'll be able to form numbers from 1 to 99. Very easy, right?

Let me show you an example.

To get the number 23, you will need to put together 슀물 (20) and μ…‹ (3). Therefore, 23 is 슀물 μ…‹ in Korean.

More examples:

18 = μ—΄ (10) and μ—¬λŸ (8)
     = μ—΄μ—¬λŸ (yeol yeodeol)

59 = μ‰° (50) + 아홉 (9)
     = μ‰° 아홉 (shin ahop)

94 = 아흔 (90) + λ„· (4)
     = 아흔 λ„· (aheun net)

It's actually so simple as long as you know all the numbers listed above.

Now, counting in Korean is pretty much the same as counting in English. We use specific counting units or counter nouns to a certain type of item. Like in English, pairs, sheets, packs, etc.

When counting using Native Korean numbers, take note that the last letter of the syllable of the following numbers are omitted when added to a counting unit.

1, 2, 3, 4 and 20.

1 ν•˜λ‚˜ becomes ν•œ
2 λ‘˜ becomes 두
3 μ…‹ becomes μ„Έ
4 λ„· becomes λ„€
20 슀물 becomes 슀무

Native Korean Counting Units 

~ 개 used for objects in general 
* If you don't know which counting unit to use, use this. 
  사과 λ‹€μ„― 개 5 apples
  μ—°ν•„ μ„Έ 개 3 pencils 


~ 마리 for counting animals 
  κ³° λ„€ 마리 4 bears
  λ¬Όκ³ κΈ° μ—΄ 마리 10 fishes

* also used often to order things like chicken
 μ–‘념 μΉ˜ν‚¨ ν•œ 마리 μ£Όμ„Έμš”. (One seasoned chicken, please.)


~ 병 bottles
 μ†Œμ£Ό λ‹€μ„― 병 5 bottles of soju
 μ½œλΌ ν•œ 병 a bottle of cola 
 λ§₯μ£Ό 두 병  2 bottles of beer


~ 케레 pairs (of shoes and socks)
  양말 λ„€ 컬레   4 pair of socks 
  μš΄λ™ν™” ν•œ 케레   a pair of running shoes


~ 쑰각 slices/pieces 
* used with pizza, cake, or bread 
λΉ΅ 두 쑰각   2 slices of bread


~ λŒ€ machines/vehicles
  냉μž₯κ³  ν•œ λŒ€   one fridge 
  μžμ „κ±° λ„€ λŒ€   4 bicycles


~ 그릇 bowls 
  λΉ„λΉ”λ°₯ 두 그릇  2 bowls of bibimbap
  라면 ν•œ 그릇   a bowl of ramen

** use 곡기 when referring to rice. 곡기 can only be used for rice. 


~ μž₯ thin sheets/flat objects 
 μš°ν‘œ 두 μž₯   2 stamps 
  쒅이 λ„€ μž₯  4 sheets of paper


~ μƒμž or λ°•μŠ€ for boxes 
  μ˜€λ Œμ§€ ν•œ μƒμž  a box of orange


~ μ‹œκ°„ hours (duration) 
 μ„Έ μ‹œκ°„ 3 hours 
 μ—΄λ‘ μ‹œκ°„ 12 hours 


~ μ‹œ o'clock 
 μ—΄ν•œμ‹œ 11 o'clock (written as 11μ‹œ)
 μ—¬λŸμ‹œ  8 o'clock (8μ‹œ)


~ μž” for glasses or cups
  컀피 두 μž”  two cups of coffee
  μ†Œμ£Ό ν•œ μž”  a glass of soju


~ μ‚΄ years of age 
  일흔 μ‚΄  70 years old 
  슀무 μ‚΄  20 years old 


~ λͺ… people/person (same as μ‚¬λžŒ)
  학생 λ‹€μ„―λͺ… 5 students
  ν•œ λͺ… one person


~ μ‚¬λžŒ people/person
*literally means person and unlike λͺ…, this can be used alone
 example: 저도 ν•œκ΅­ μ‚¬λžŒμ΄μ—μš”. I am also a Korean person. 


~ ꢌ for books
  μ˜μ–΄ μ±… μ„ΈκΆŒ  an English book 
  μ†Œμ„€μ±… 두 ꢌ  2 novels


~ λΆ„ people (honorific form)
* when referring to people using this counter noun, always use Native Korean numbers. This would have a different meaning once a Sino-Korean number is used.

example at a restaurant:
waiter to a customer, λͺ‡ λΆ„μ΄μ„Έμš”? (How many are you?)

You can use this when you're talking about people who are of higher rank or older than you. 
μ„ μƒλ‹˜ μ„Έ λΆ„ 3 teachers 
ν• λ¨Έλ‹ˆ μ—¬μ„― λΆ„ 6 grandmothers


~ 솑이 bunch of fruits
 λ°”λ‚˜λ‚˜ ν•œ 솑이  a cluster of bananas
 ν¬λ„ 두 솑이  a bunch of grapes


~ 번 number of times
  ν•œλ²ˆ  one time
  λ‘λ²ˆ  two times

* be careful in using 번 since this counting unit is also used in the Sino-Korean counting system but with a different meaning.  

There! That ends our Native Korean system counting lesson. I've prepared a chart for reference. 


In the next article, as a continuation of this topic, we'll be talking about the Sino-Korean counting system

Stay tuned! 'Til next time! 

Comments

  1. Hello thanks for these! �� when will u update the sino korean numbers with it’s usage ? ��

    ReplyDelete

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