Grammar
Korean B2
Handle stance, reporting, and more compact written Korean with confidence.
On this level
- Stance and hypothesis
Move into concessive, hypothetical, and softened evaluative meaning.
- Voice and reporting
Express information more indirectly, formally, or at a distance.
- Formal discourse
Structure longer explanation and argument more cleanly.
Stance and hypothesis
Move into concessive, hypothetical, and softened evaluative meaning.
-(으)면 좋겠다 and hypothetical condition
Korean often uses conditional patterns to express wishes, imagined situations, and softened recommendations.
Concession and contrast at B2
Korean uses richer concessive frames to show that something happens despite an opposing fact or expectation.
Voice and reporting
Express information more indirectly, formally, or at a distance.
Reported speech
Korean often reports what someone said, thought, or claimed through special reporting endings and frames.
Passive and causative basics
Korean changes the verb form to foreground what was affected or to show that one participant caused another action.
Formal discourse
Structure longer explanation and argument more cleanly.
Formal connectors
Connectors like 그러나, 따라서, and 한편 help organize longer Korean explanation and argument more clearly.
Nominalization with -기 and 것
Korean often turns actions and clauses into noun-like units so they can be evaluated, discussed, or embedded in larger sentences.