Topic Particle

Definition:

The Korean topic particle 은/는 (eun after consonant-final nouns; neun after vowel-final nouns) marks the topic of a sentence — the noun phrase about which the rest of the sentence (the comment) makes a claim or provides information. The topic particle also functions as a contrast marker, setting a noun phrase in opposition to alternatives. The topic particle is not equivalent to the subject in all cases: it can mark subjects, objects, or adverbials when they are topicalized. The distinction between topic 은/는 and subject particle 이/가 is one of the most significant and persistently difficult aspects of Korean grammar for L2 learners, as no direct equivalent exists in most European languages.


Topic vs. Subject Functions

FunctionParticleExampleMeaning
Neutral topic (subject = topic)은/는 학생이에요“I am a student” (I = topic of conversation)
Subject-focused / identificational이/가 학생이에요“It is I who am the student” (contrastive identification)
Topicalized non-subject은/는이 책 재미있어요“This book (as for it) is interesting”
Contrast은/는이건 좋데, 저건 안 좋아요“This one is good, but that one is not”

The Topic-Comment Structure

Korean is a topic-prominent language — like Japanese and Mandarin — where sentences are structurally organized around a topic (given information) and a comment (new information about the topic). The topic particle explicitly marks this information structure.

“?/? for New vs. Old Information” Rule

A commonly taught rule:

  • 이/가 introduces a subject for the first time (new or focused information)
  • 은/는 marks a subject as already established in the discourse (given information / topic)

However, this rule is an oversimplification: contrast use of 은/는 can introduce new information in a contrastive frame.

L2 Acquisition Challenges

L2 learners of Korean:

  1. Frequently over-use one particle (usually 은/는) where 이/가 is required
  2. Miss the contrastive implication of 이/가 (saying “I did it” when meaning “I (not someone else) did it” requires 가, not 는)
  3. Lack a clear metalinguistic framework for information structure — this must be explicitly taught

History

Topic-comment structure in Korean has been analyzed within both traditional Korean grammar and formal linguistic frameworks. Li & Thompson (1976) typologically classified Korean as a topic-prominent language. Park (1981) examined the pragmatics of topic particle choice in K discourse.

Common Misconceptions

  • “?/? always marks the subject” — It marks the topic, which can be any constituent including objects, time adverbials, and locatives
  • “은/는 and 이/가 are interchangeable” — They encode different information structure and pragmatic meaning; choosing the wrong one changes the meaning of the utterance

Criticisms

  • Pedagogical explanations of ?/? vs. ?/? often reduce a complex phenomenon to an oversimplified rule that breaks down in real input
  • Native speakers sometimes disagree on boundary cases, complicating learner calibration

Social Media Sentiment

The 은/는 vs. 이/가 distinction is one of the most intensely discussed Korean grammar topics online — countless YouTube videos, blog posts, and Reddit threads address it, and it remains a “lightbulb moment” topic for many intermediate Korean learners. Last updated: 2026-04

Practical Application

  • Teach the topic vs. subject distinction explicitly, not just through particle charts — use discourse-level examples showing how information structure motivates particle choice
  • Provide contrastive minimal pairs: same sentence with ?/? and ?/?, highlighting the meaning difference

Related Terms

See Also

Research

  • Sohn, H.-M. (1999). The Korean Language. Cambridge University Press. — Comprehensive analysis of Korean topic and subject particles.
  • Li, C. N., & Thompson, S. A. (1976). Subject and topic: A new typology of language. In C. N. Li (Ed.), Subject and Topic (pp. 457–489). Academic Press. — Foundational typological framework classifying Korean as a topic-prominent language.
  • Ko, H. (2005). Syntax of Why-In-Situ: Merge into [Spec,CP] in the Overt Syntax. Natural Language & Linguistic Theory. — Formal linguistic analysis of Korean topic structure.