American Learns Korean Day28: Practical Numbers, Time & Dates Review (Beginner Practice)

American Learns Korean Day28

What Day28 Must Fix: The 3 Real-Life Moments Beginners Freeze

American Learns Korean Day28 is not about “knowing rules.” It’s about removing hesitation in situations that happen every day:

  1. Ordering at a café/restaurant: quantity + price
  2. Making plans: what time (hour + minute)
  3. Scheduling: what date + what day of the week

If you can say these smoothly, Month 2 grammar becomes much easier because you stop wasting brainpower just to produce basic numbers.


Korean Has Two Number Systems: A Simple Decision Rule

The confusion is normal: Korean uses two number systems. The fastest way through is a decision rule you can apply instantly.

  • Sino-Korean numbers (일, 이, 삼…): dates, minutes/seconds, money, formal counting (basic)
  • Native Korean numbers (하나, 둘, 셋…): counting items/people, and the “hour” in time (1–12시)

In American Learns Korean Day28, your goal is to make this choice automatic.


Cheat Sheet 1: Sino-Korean Numbers (Dates, Minutes, Money)

Sino-Korean numbers are common with units like 월/일, 분/초, 원.

  • 1 일, 2 이, 3 삼, 4 사, 5 오
  • 6 육, 7 칠, 8 팔, 9 구, 10 십
  • 11 십일, 12 십이, 20 이십, 30 삼십

Daily-use examples

  • It starts in 10 minutes. → 십 분 후에 시작해요.
  • It’s 5,000 won. → 오천 원이에요.
  • Today is January 7. → 1월 7일이에요.
  • I leave in 2026. → 2026년에 출발해요.

Date format is fixed

  • (number) + 월 + (number) + 일
    Examples: 1월 7일, 12월 25일, 2026년 1월 7일

Cheat Sheet 2: Native Korean Numbers (Counting + Hours)

Native Korean numbers are used for counting and (most importantly at beginner level) hours.

  • 1 하나, 2 둘, 3 셋, 4 넷, 5 다섯
  • 6 여섯, 7 일곱, 8 여덟, 9 아홉, 10 열

The Key Beginner Trap: 1–4 Change Shape (한/두/세/네)

When counting, you usually say:

  • 하나 → (한 개)
  • 둘 → (두 명)
  • 셋 → (세 시 / 세 잔)
  • 넷 → (네 개 / 네 잔)

Examples

  • One bottle, please. → 물 한 병 주세요.
  • Two people. → 사람 두 명이에요.
  • Three cups of coffee. → 커피 세 잔 주세요.
  • It’s four o’clock. → 지금 네 시예요.

This is a major focus in American Learns Korean Day28 because it’s where “beginner Korean” becomes obvious if you miss it.


The Core Formula: Time = Native “Hour” + Sino “Minute”

Time is mixed—this is why beginners hesitate. Use this structure:

  • (Native) 시 + (Sino) 분

Examples:

  • 2:15 → 두 시 십오 분
  • 3:30 → 세 시 삼십 분
  • 11:05 → 열한 시 오 분
  • 1:45 → 한 시 사십오 분

If you lock this pattern in, your planning conversations become dramatically smoother—exactly the point of American Learns Korean Day28.


Days of the Week + Dates: The Natural Spoken Frame

Days of the week:

  • 월요일 / 화요일 / 수요일 / 목요일 / 금요일 / 토요일 / 일요일

A clean beginner-friendly speaking frame:

  1. Month + day (required)
  2. Day of week (optional but recommended)
  3. Finish with 이에요/예요, or add a location/time phrase

Examples:

  • Today is Wednesday, Jan 7. → 1월 7일 수요일이에요.
  • I depart on Feb 3. → 2월 3일에 출발해요.
  • Let’s meet next Friday. → 다음 주 금요일에 만나요.
  • The exam is Tuesday, March 10. → 3월 10일 화요일에 시험이 있어요.

5 Common Mistakes (And the Quick Fix)

  1. Using Sino numbers for hours
    • At beginner level, stick to 한 시, 두 시, 세 시.
  2. Trying to use Native numbers for minutes
    • Minutes are safer as Sino numbers: 십오 분, 삼십 분, 사십오 분.
  3. Forgetting 한/두/세/네
    • “하나 개” sounds unnatural. Use 한 개.
  4. Dropping 일 in dates
    • Say the full form: 1월 7일 (not “1월 7”).
  5. 네 (four) vs 내 (my) confusion
    • Fix it with sentence chunks:
      • 사람 네 명이에요. / 커피 네 잔 주세요.

These are the exact hesitation points American Learns Korean Day28 is designed to eliminate.


1-Minute Speaking Script: Making an Appointment (Copy and Swap Numbers)

A: Are you free tomorrow?
B: Yes. What time should we meet?
A: How about 3:30? → 세 시 삼십 분 어때요?
B: Sounds good. Where should we meet?
A: Let’s meet at the café. → 카페에서 만나요.
B: Great. See you tomorrow, Thursday, Jan 8, at 3:30.
→ 그럼 내일 1월 8일 목요일, 세 시 삼십 분에 봐요.

Do not chase perfect pronunciation first. Your priority is no stopping—that’s how speed builds.


Drill 1 (3 Minutes): Time Automation (Hour + Minute)

Read these out loud. Each line, 20–30 seconds:

  • 지금 두 시 십 분이에요.
  • 세 시 삼십 분에 만나요.
  • 열한 시 오 분에 출발해요.
  • 한 시 사십오 분에 도착해요.
  • 아홉 시 이십 분에 시작해요.
  • 다섯 시 오십 분에 끝나요.

Tip: Keep the hour stable first, then swap only the minutes.


Drill 2 (2 Minutes): Dates + Days of the Week

  • 오늘은 1월 7일 수요일이에요.
  • 제 생일은 5월 12일이에요.
  • 여행은 8월 3일 월요일에 시작해요.
  • 회의는 2월 20일 금요일이에요.

Drill 3 (2 Minutes): Counting (한/두/세/네) in Real Orders

  • 한 병 주세요.
  • 사람 두 명이에요.
  • 커피 세 잔 주세요.
  • 네 개 주세요.
  • 의자 두 개 필요해요.
  • 메뉴 세 개 추천해 주세요.

Do not memorize “words.” Memorize complete sentences. This is the fastest method in American Learns Korean Day28.


Mini Test (10 Questions): Score Yourself

Try first, then check answers.

  1. 3:20 = ( )
  2. 11:05 = ( )
  3. 1 item = ( )
  4. 4 people = ( )
  5. Feb 3 = ( )
  6. 10 minutes = ( )
  7. “Tomorrow at 2:30” in beginner Korean = ( )
  8. “Coffee, two cups please” in beginner Korean = ( )
  9. Say “Today is Wednesday, Jan 7” in Korean word order (check)
  10. Which uses Sino numbers more often at beginner level: 시 or 분? (시/분)

Answer Key

  1. 세 시 이십 분
  2. 열한 시 오 분
  3. 한 개
  4. 네 명
  5. 2월 3일 (spoken: 이월 삼일)
  6. 십 분
  7. 내일 두 시 삼십 분에 만나요/이에요 (choose a natural ending)
  8. 커피 두 잔 주세요
  9. 오늘은 1월 7일 수요일이에요

Missed items are not “bad.” They are your exact improvement target—perfect for American Learns Korean Day28 review.


Homework (5 Minutes): Convert to Your Real Schedule

Fill in with your real life:

  1. 오늘은 ( )월 ( )일 ( )요일이에요.
  2. 내일 ( )시에 일어나요.
  3. ( )시 ( )분에 출발해요.
  4. ( )분 후에 전화할게요.
  5. 커피 ( )잔 주세요.
  6. 사람 ( )명이에요.

This “personalization” step makes the patterns stick.


Image Ideas for the Post (Optional)

  • Image 1: “Native hour + Sino minute” one-page cheat card
  • Image 2: 한/두/세/네 conversion card with order examples
  • Image 3: Calendar-style date + weekday examples

If you want, I can design these consistently for American Learns Korean Day28 visuals.


Checklist (If You Finish This, You Win Day28)

  • I said 10 time sentences using (시 + 분) without stopping
  • I practiced 한/두/세/네 in full sentences 10 times
  • I produced 5 date + weekday sentences
  • I recorded my mini test score
  • Tomorrow I will review only my weak type for 5 minutes

FAQ

Q1. Why does Korean have two number systems?
A1. There are historical reasons, but at beginner level, the fastest approach is pattern mastery: choose correctly, then speak smoothly.

Q2. Do I always have to use Native numbers for hours?
A2. Mixed usage exists, but for beginners it’s best to lock in the standard: Native for hours, Sino for minutes.

Q3. I freeze whenever I see numbers. What’s the fix?
A3. Stop practicing numbers alone. Practice them inside complete sentences (the drills above). Korean becomes easier when you train chunks.

Americans learns korean – Day27 (Review Day27 again)

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“American Learns Korean Day28: Practical Numbers, Time & Dates Review (Beginner Practice)”에 대한 1개의 생각

  1. 핑백: American Learns Korean Day29: Speed Reading with Short Phrases (Beginner Fluency Drill) | Brown-Sugar

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