意味
Stating one's ability to speak some Korean.
文化的背景
The 'Compliment Culture': In Korea, it is common to be complimented early and often on your language skills. Accepting the compliment with 'Thank you' (감사합니다) is okay, but following it with 'I only know a little' is considered much more socially adept. Under-promising and Over-delivering: In a Korean workplace, saying you 'know a little' might lead your boss to give you a simple task. If you perform it perfectly, you gain 'face.' If you say you are 'good' and make a mistake, you lose 'face.' On apps like Instagram or TikTok, learners often use the hashtag #한국말조금할줄알아요 to connect with other learners and native speakers who are willing to help beginners. Korean teachers (Seonsaengnim) highly value the 'ㄹ 줄 알다' structure because it shows the student has moved beyond simple memorization and is using functional grammar.
The 'Jom' Shortcut
In casual speech, replace '조금' with '좀' (jom). It sounds much more native and flows better. '한국말 좀 할 줄 알아요.'
Don't be TOO humble
If you are at an intermediate level, saying '조금' might make people switch to English immediately. If you want to practice, say '한국말로 대화하고 싶어요' (I want to converse in Korean).
意味
Stating one's ability to speak some Korean.
The 'Jom' Shortcut
In casual speech, replace '조금' with '좀' (jom). It sounds much more native and flows better. '한국말 좀 할 줄 알아요.'
Don't be TOO humble
If you are at an intermediate level, saying '조금' might make people switch to English immediately. If you want to practice, say '한국말로 대화하고 싶어요' (I want to converse in Korean).
Body Language
When saying this phrase as a humble response, a slight tilt of the head or a small smile helps convey the 'Gyeom-son' (humility) perfectly.
自分をテスト
Fill in the missing part to say 'I know how to speak a little Korean.'
저는 한국말 조금 할 ___ 알아요.
The pattern for 'knowing how to' is '-(으)ㄹ 줄 알다'.
Which sentence is the most polite and natural for a beginner meeting a stranger?
Choose the best option:
Option B uses the correct grammar and the polite '요' ending.
Complete the dialogue with a humble response.
가: 한국말 진짜 잘하시네요! 나: 아니에요. ________.
This is the standard humble response to a compliment about language skills.
Match the phrase to the correct situation.
Situation: You are at a job interview and want to sound professional.
The '-습니다/압니다' ending is the most appropriate for formal professional settings.
🎉 スコア: /4
ビジュアル学習ツール
Politeness Levels
練習問題バンク
4 問題저는 한국말 조금 할 ___ 알아요.
The pattern for 'knowing how to' is '-(으)ㄹ 줄 알다'.
Choose the best option:
Option B uses the correct grammar and the polite '요' ending.
가: 한국말 진짜 잘하시네요! 나: 아니에요. ________.
This is the standard humble response to a compliment about language skills.
Situation: You are at a job interview and want to sound professional.
The '-습니다/압니다' ending is the most appropriate for formal professional settings.
🎉 スコア: /4
よくある質問
10 問'한국말' is more common in speaking, while '한국어' is used in formal writing or academic contexts. Both are correct here.
Yes! You can say '수영할 줄 알아요' (I know how to swim) or '피아노 칠 줄 알아요' (I know how to play piano).
You can! '한국말 조금 해요' is shorter and very common. '할 줄 알아요' sounds slightly more 'complete' as a grammatical thought.
Say '한국말 못해요' (I can't speak Korean) or '한국말 할 줄 몰라요' (I don't know how to speak Korean).
Yes, but in some contexts, it can also mean 'please' (as a softener) or 'somewhat.' Here, it strictly means quantity/degree.
It is polite, but '압니다' is safer for a very formal boss. For most office environments, '알아요' is fine.
Just add a question mark and raise your intonation: '한국말 조금 할 줄 알아요?'
Yes, the word order is flexible, but putting '조금' right before '할 줄 알아요' is more common.
It is {韓國|한국}. '韓' (Han) refers to the Korean people/nation, and '國' (Guk) means country.
It is a future/prospective modifier that attaches to the verb stem '하-' to connect it to the noun '줄'.
関連フレーズ
한국어 공부하고 있어요
similarI am studying Korean.
한국말 잘 못해요
contrastI can't speak Korean well.
천천히 말씀해 주세요
builds onPlease speak slowly.
다시 한번 말해 주세요
builds onPlease say it one more time.