Continuing Korean. Ross King
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Название: Continuing Korean

Автор: Ross King

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Книги о Путешествиях

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isbn: 9781462914920

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СКАЧАТЬ 나는 냉면을 싫어해요. I don’t like naengmyǒn. 9. 진호 씨는 냉면을 싫어해요. Chinho doesn’t like naengmyǒn. 10. 나는 형님이 부러워요. I’m envious of my older brother. 11. 동생도 형님을 부러워해요. My younger brother is envious of my older brother, too.

      These sensory expressions are made honorific by changing 해요 to 하세요.

좋아하세요 싫어하세요
기뻐하세요 고마워하세요
싶어하세요

      In other words, you cannot say *싶으셔 해요 or the like.

      주의! Honorifics

From the expression -고 싶어요 you can make honorifics in two different ways.
-(으)시고 싶어요? or -고 싶으세요?
and from the expression -고 싶어해요 you also have both possibilities.
-(으)시고 싶어해요 or -고 싶어하세요
But the latter is more common, and it is even possible to have a double-honorific form like:
-(으)시고 싶으세요 or -(으)시고 싶어하세요.
To make the sensory verb-expression negative you change 해요 to 하지 않아요.
좋아하지 않아요 싫어하지 않아요
기뻐하지 않아요 고마워하지 않아요
-고 싶어하지 않아요

      To make the expression both negative and honorific you can apply either the negative first (좋아하지 않으세요) or the honorific first (좋아하시지 않아요), or you can take the latter expression and reapply the honorific (좋아하시지 않으세요) for a somewhat overhonorific effect. In the case of -고 싶어해요, you actually find all these possibilities:

a. -고 싶어하지 않으세요 (Most common)
b. -고 싶어하시지 않으세요 (Most common)
c. -고 싶어하시지 않아요 (Not common)
d. -(으)시고 싶어하지 않아요 (Not common)
e. -(으)시고 싶어하지 않으세요 (Not common)
f. -(으)시고 싶어하시지 않으세요 (Not common)

      The last example, triply honorific, is a bit too fancy for everyday use.

      17.2. Uses of the Infinitive IV: Compound Verbs

      The expressions discussed in Section 17.1, just above—좋아해요 likes, 고마워해요 is grateful for, and so on—are compound verb expressions. They are made by joining to an infinitive—a verb that names the action—some form of another verb (해요 does in these two cases).

      주의!

      Note that it is always this second (auxiliary) verb that does the rest of the work: it shows the tense and whether the expression is affirmative or negative, question or statement, and so on. This pattern is a general one with Korean verb expressions: the first (main) verb merely tells what action or quality is under discussion—goes, eats, walks; is good, is large, is late—and is otherwise frozen; the second (auxiliary) verb completes the expression and fits it into the sentence with appropriate endings. The honorific and negative expressions are usually built on the auxiliary verb, not on the infinitive.

      17.2.1. Compound Verbs with 가- and 오-

      Some of the compound expressions you have learned involve the verbs 가요 goes and 와요 comes used as auxiliaries to show direction.

도-ᄅ- tum (round) 돌아가요 goes back
돌아와요 comes back
드-ᄅ enter 들어가요 goes in
들어와요 comes in
나- exit 나가요 goes out
나와요 comes out
걸- walk 걸어가요 walks (there)
걸어와요 walks (here)
오르- ascend 올라가요 goes up
올라와요 comes up
내리- descend 내려가요 goes down
내려와요 comes down

      Here are some more examples of compound verb expressions with 가- go and 오- come in sentences.

12. 아버님이 내일 미국에서 돌아오세요. Father is returning from the United States СКАЧАТЬ