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{{wiktionary|Category:Korean parts of speech}}
In modern [[South Korea]]n scholarship, there are generally considered to be 9 '''[[Part of speech|parts of speech]]''' (''pumsa;'' [[Hangul|품사]]; [[Hanja|品詞]]) in '''[[Korean grammar]]''', though the number can vary slightly between sources. There are also various other important classes of words and [[morpheme]]s that are not generally classified as parts of speech.
In modern [[South Korea]]n scholarship, there are generally considered to be 9 '''[[Part of speech|parts of speech]]''' (''pumsa;'' [[Hangul|품사]]; [[Hanja|品詞]]) in '''[[Korean grammar]]''', though the number can vary slightly between sources. There are also various other important classes of words and [[morpheme]]s that are not generally classified as parts of speech.



Revision as of 03:56, 21 September 2009

In modern South Korean scholarship, there are generally considered to be 9 parts of speech (pumsa; 품사; 品詞) in Korean grammar, though the number can vary slightly between sources. There are also various other important classes of words and morphemes that are not generally classified as parts of speech.

The 9 parts of speech are:

5 other major classes of words or morphemes are:

Determiners come before and modify nouns, much like attributive adjectives in English. Particles come after nouns and sometimes function like prepositions in English (hence the name "postposition"), often being used to indicate the case of nouns. Particles are also often used to indicate the role (subject, object, complement, or topic) of a noun in a sentence or clause.

A special particle is ida (이다), a "predicative particle" (seosulgyeok josa; 서술격 조사) that behaves much like the English copula "be" (in joining subjects to their complements) and is therefore often called a "verb" in English sources, though it is not regarded as such in Korean grammar. 이다 cannot be negated by adding the prefix 안; instead it has a special negative form 아니다.

Both cardinal and ordinal numbers are grouped into their own part of speech. Adjectives are fully conjugated, just like verbs. Verb endings constitute a large and rich class of morphemes, indicating such things in a sentence as tense, mood, aspect, speech level (of which there are 7 in Korean), and honorifics. Prefixes and suffixes are numerous, partly because Korean is an agglutinative language.

See also