Hangukeo

Is Korean a difficult language to learn? What is the hardest part? Is it regular or full of exceptions?

bump

I'm also curious

Korean has same basic grammar with Japan, so if you don't get used to SOV you would have a problem. Hangul is arguably the most logical alphabet in the world. And they don't use Hanja anymore except for formal document.
It's far easier than Japanese.

>Korean has same basic grammar with Japan

bumpus ultimus

...

Korean is the most difficult in the world :^(

I've learnt Hangul today, it's really logical and also fits the language very well, but what do you mean by "Korean has same basic grammar with Japan"? I know that they both use SOV, both are agglutinative, but are their categories identical? Like politeness, for example, yes? Are tenses the same?

40 verb forms isn't that much, each Spanich ver has 53 or 54 forms. But your picture is really informative, so you use politeness as a grammar category, you also have regular and irregular verbs.

That's really similar, at least structurally, terima kasih.

>Spanich ver
verb, of course, sry

폴락들 다 몰살
>언제?

>Spanich
Spanish, sry, it's 3:40 AM here

Is one anecdote proof?

죽어라쪽발이

hmmmm…

are you ready to fuck off yet?

how did you learn this

They're very similar. My extended family is from Korea and my businessman uncle says that Japanese is easy to learn for Korean speakers because of how similar they are.

I know that one grammatical difference is that Japanese puts negation at the end of things (ja nai) and Korean puts them at the beginning.

zainichi.

It's okay.