Another short but sweet one. This one is something I've been searching for. I have a tendency to use "전에" and "후에" a lot in spoken Korean. However, it's more of a written expression. Using "후에" to express what will happen later isn't the worst thing one can do but it certainly isn't very native sounding. Therefore, the language nerd student rejoiced when I found this. I hope I can adopt it and similar expressions natively.
~고 나서, as you might have guessed, is used when one event has just finished and another is coming. But, how does this differ from vanilla "고" and "아/어서"? Seems we need a brief summary before going on:
(고)
오늘 친구가 만나고 영화 봤어요.
Today I met my friend and I saw a movie (but the friend didn't come with me).
The two events are not related. Both are in the past, though. Sequential order not implied (maybe I met my friend first or maybe I saw a movie first. Doesn't matter because we didn't see the movie together. It's just a recollection of stuff that happened today)
(아/어서)
오늘 친구가 만나서 영화 봤어요.
Today I met my friend and we saw a movie together.
The two events are related in sequential order. First I met my friend, and then we saw a movie.
The "~고 나서" grammar point is similar but has a vital difference. In this case, the first event (A) is already finished before the second event (B) will take place. The book I'm using gives a great example:
스티브는 저녁을 먹고 나서 도서관에 가서 공부를 해요.
After Steve eats dinner, he goes to the library to study.
Let's take a look at some other examples:
A: 언제 숙제 했어요? when did you do your homework?
B: 점심 먹고 나서 했어요. I did it after lunch, jerky.
A: 샤워 하고 나서 여친한테 전화 할 거야 After I take a shower, I'll call my girlfriend
Actually, I'm not super confident with the last grammar point. someone correct me.
어디서 본 적 있지 않아요?
과거
요즘 쓰는 글
범주
- (으)ㄹ까 하다
- (不)
- (中)
- (初)
- (夫)
- (末)
- (水)
- (物)
- (病)
- (痛)
- (癡)
- (聖)
- ~(으)ㄴ/는지 알아?
- ~(으)ㄹ테니까
- ~거든
- ~것 같다
- ~고 나서
- ~기 바라다
- ~냐고
- ~는 길에
- ~는 대로
- ~다가
- ~다고
- ~도 돼요?
- ~ㄹ 줄 알다
- ~면 안 돼요?
- ~아/어야겠다
- ~어/아서
- ~으니까
- ~자마자
- ~잖아요
- ~쟁이
- ~죠?
- ~지오?
- ~지요?
- ~했어야 했다
- about
- ads
- adverbs
- age
- any~
- anyway
- area
- bag
- body
- book review
- catholic
- children's book
- children's song
- choice
- choose
- christmas
- clean
- clothing
- cold
- copy
- dance
- disease
- ewha
- for
- forget
- free
- free resources
- games
- Glory Be
- guess
- habit
- Hail Mary
- hanja
- happy
- hear
- holy
- hope
- hot
- hurt
- intro
- iriver
- Japanese
- joke
- just now
- KGYSAK
- KLEAR
- Konglish
- like
- listen
- loanwords
- location
- lost
- marriage
- Mass
- meaning
- medium
- middle
- misinterpretations
- mistake
- naked
- negation
- neighborhood
- Nobody
- Nothing
- now
- old
- on your way
- order
- Our Father
- pathfinder
- permission
- place
- prayer
- reason
- recently
- refusal
- Richard Harris
- roommate
- scholarship
- seems
- self-study
- should have
- sick
- sing
- slang
- slow
- speaking korean
- speech
- stuff I don't know
- teaching english
- thing
- times of the month
- to wear
- uniform
- vocabulary
- vs
- water
- young
- youtube
- 가방
- 가톨릭
- 게
- 결혼
- 고르다
- 공짜
- 관용 표현
- 광고
- 규칙
- 근처
- 금방
- 금연
- 기도
- 기쁘다
- 깨끗하다
- 께
- 끝말잇기
- 내숭
- 농담
- 누나
- 느리게
- 능력
- 단어
- 대해서
- 덥다
- 동네
- 동생
- 동안
- 동영상
- 돼
- 되
- 들려
- 들어
- 뜨겁다
- 띄어쓰기
- 라고
- 만화
- 매일
- 맨날
- 맨몸
- 맵다
- 먼저
- 명령
- 못
- 무료
- 문법
- 물
- 미사
- 바보
- 발음
- 발표
- 방금
- 버릇
- 번역
- 변지
- 병
- 복
- 복사
- 봉투
- 부
- 부모님
- 부사
- 불
- 사전
- 선택하다
- 성
- 성모송
- 성호경
- 수
- 순서 ~는 대로
- 순정만화
- 습관
- 시키다
- 식
- 신체
- 실수
- 쓰기 연습
- 쓰다
- 씩
- 아무거나
- 아무것도
- 아무나
- 아무데나
- 아무데도
- 아무데서도
- 아무도
- 아무때나
- 아무튼
- 아프다
- 안
- 않
- 알몸
- 애교
- 어디예요?
- 어디있어요?
- 어른
- 어린이
- 어쨌든
- 어치피
- 어학당
- 어학원
- 언니
- 에
- 에서
- 역시
- 영광송
- 영화
- 오빠
- 옷
- 외해서
- 요세
- 요즘
- 위치
- 육체 노동
- 을/를
- 의
- 의미
- 이/가
- 이대
- 이유
- 이제
- 일기 쓰기
- 일단
- 일본어
- 일상적인
- 잃어버리다
- 입다
- 잊어버리다
- 자기 소개
- 잘못
- 장난
- 장소
- 장학금
- 정도
- 조사
- 좋다
- 좋아하다
- 주님의 기도
- 주문하다
- 중
- 즐겁다
- 지금
- 차갑다
- 처럼
- 처음
- 천천히
- 청소하다
- 춥다
- 치
- 통
- 편지
- 하루
- 한자
- 행복하다
- 형
- 호칭
- 服
특별한 포스트
비슷한 웹 사이트
- Autospacing Tool
- Bonewso
- Bonewso Links
- Brad's Korean Vocabublog
- Busy Atom's Learn Korean
- CALPER - Advanced Korean
- Daily Dose of Hangul
- Everyday Hanja
- EZCorean
- Galbijim's Language Lab
- Hanguk Drama
- KLEAR
- KLEC
- Korea Times Mini-lessons
- Korean As It Is
- Korean Language Notes
- Korean Study Room
- Korean to English Translation Blog
- Korean Wiki Project
- Korean word of the day
- KoreanClass 101
- LanguageCast
- Learn Korean @ Ning
- Learn Korean Easily
- Let's Learn and Practice Korean
- Luke's Grammar Guide
- Lyrunne's Delight
- Matthew + Korean = Fun
- My Happy Dreams
- National Institute of Korean Language
- NEALRC
- Neo Hanja
- On My Way To Korea
- Online Intermediate College Korean Course
- Online Seoul University Beginner Course
- Pronunciation Guide
- So you want to learn Korean
- Talk To Me In Korean
- TOPIK Exam study blog
- Transparent Korean Blog
- Wikibooks: Korean
- Yeeun2Grace
- 네, 진짜!
- 만두 Mandu's Korean Notes
- 살인미소 Sarin Miso
- 카에르의 한국어 연습 불로그
- 한국어 맞춤법
5 Responses to “~고 나서”
A: 샤워 하고 나서 여친에 전화 할 거야 After I take a shower, I'll call my girlfriend
should be 여친한테
nice blog btw
@ heartbeat - you are completely right! Thanks for catching that. Please feel free to leave a correction or comment anytime!
I'm not sure but shouldn't it be 친구를?
'전에' and '후에' are both frequently used in spoken Korean as well as in written expressions. Using them in spoken Korean is quite natively sounding. Believe me, I'm Korean!:)
For example, "5일 후에 전화할께." "5분 전에 그 곳에 있었어." sounds very natural.
Post a Comment