Definition:
Korean grammar describes the grammatical structure of the Korean language, characterized by: Subject-Object-Verb (SOV) word order, a rich system of postpositional particles marking grammatical functions, agglutinative verbal morphology (chains of suffixes added to verb stems encoding tense, aspect, mood, politeness level, and more), a complex speech level and honorific system, and topic-comment sentence structure using the topic particle 은/는. Korean grammar differs typologically from English (SVO, prepositional) and Chinese (SVO, analytic), making it a substantial acquisition challenge for English and Mandarin speakers — while being more familiar to Japanese and Mongolian speakers due to shared typological features.
Typological Overview
| Feature | Korean | English | Japanese |
|---|---|---|---|
| Word order | SOV (flexible with particles) | SVO (fairly strict) | SOV |
| Case marking | Postpositional particles | Prepositions + word order | Postpositional particles |
| Morphological type | Agglutinative | Analytic/inflecting | Agglutinative |
| Verb position | Final | Second | Final |
| Topic marking | 은/는 | No equivalent | は (wa) |
| Politeness encoded in | Verb endings + honorific vocab | Intonation, word choice | Verb endings |
Core Grammatical Features
1. Particles (조사 josa)
Korean uses postpositional particles attached to nouns to mark grammatical roles:
- 이/가 — subject marker (see subject particle)
- 은/는 — topic marker (see topic particle)
- 을/를 — object marker (see object particle)
- 에 — location/time marker (at, in, to)
- 에서 — location of action (at, from)
- 이/가 아니다 — negation of the noun itself
2. Verb Structure
Korean verbs appear at the end of the sentence and are heavily agglutinated:
가다 (gada) = to go: 가 (stem) + 았 (past tense) + 어요 (polite present) → 갔어요 (gassŏyo) = went (politely)
3. Sentence-Final Endings
Speech levels and mood are encoded in sentence-final endings:
- Formal polite: -합니다/습니다 (-mnida/seumnida)
- Informal polite: -아요/어요 (-ayo/eoyo)
- Plain/casual: -아/어 (-a/eo)
4. Topic-Comment Structure
Korean frequently uses a topic (marked by 은/는) followed by a comment about that topic — a topic-prominent feature shared with Japanese and Mandarin.
History
Korean belongs to the Koreanic language family (though some classify it as a language isolate at the family level). It has been written in Hangul since 1443. Earlier Korean was written in Hanja (Chinese characters with Korean readings). Modern Standard Korean is based on the Seoul dialect.
Common Misconceptions
- “Korean word order is random” — While particles make word order flexible (for emphasis and topic management), SOV is the default and frequent order
- “Korean is just like Japanese” — While they share typological features (both SOV, both use particles, both have speech levels), Korean and Japanese are genetically unrelated with very different phonology and vocabulary
Criticisms
- The speech level system is extremely complex and context-dependent, creating high pragmatic demands on L2 learners
- Korean’s zero-pronoun (null subject) tendencies can make tracking referents challenging for learners from non-null-subject languages
Social Media Sentiment
Korean language learning has surged internationally due to K-pop and K-dramas, making Korean one of the most studied L2s worldwide. Korean grammar difficulty (especially particles and verb endings) is a frequent topic in language learning communities. Last updated: 2026-04
Practical Application
- Prioritize particle mastery early — particles carry the grammatical load that English word order carries
- Systematic verb suffix training is essential — building up chains of suffixes incrementally
Related Terms
- Hangul
- Korean Particles
- Topic Particle
- Subject Particle
- Object Particle
- Korean Honorifics
- Speech Levels Korean
See Also
Research
- Sohn, H.-M. (1999). The Korean Language. Cambridge University Press. — Comprehensive reference grammar and typological description.
- Lee, I., & Ramsey, S. R. (2000). The Korean Language. State University of New York Press. — Historical and structural overview of Korean grammar.
- Kim, N.-K. (2018). Korean: A Linguistic Introduction. Cambridge University Press. — Modern introduction to Korean linguistic structure for L2 researchers.