A2 general 4 Min. Lesezeit

ㅎ irregular verbs: ㅎ drop/change pattern

Drop the `ㅎ` and change the vowel to `ㅐ/ㅒ` when these irregular stems meet a vowel.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Drop final `ㅎ` when adding suffixes starting with vowels like `-(으)ㄴ` or `-(으)면`.
  • Change stem vowels `ㅏ/ㅓ` to `ㅐ` when adding `-아/어` endings.
  • Change stem vowel `ㅑ` to `ㅒ` for words like `하얗다`.
  • Common exceptions like `좋다` and `많다` always stay regular.

Quick Reference

Base Form Meaning With -(으)ㄴ (Adjective) With -아/어 (Polite)
빨갛다 Red 빨간 빨개요
노랗다 Yellow 노란 노래요
파랗다 Blue 파란 파래요
하얗다 White 하얀 하얘요
까맣다 Black 까만 까매요
이렇다 Like this 이런 이래요
어떻다 How 어떤 어때요
좋다 (Regular) Good 좋은 좋아요

Wichtige Beispiele

3 von 8
1

하늘이 정말 파래요.

The sky is really blue.

2

이런 스타일을 좋아해요.

I like this kind of style.

3

얼굴이 하얘요.

The face is white (pale).

💡

The Color Rule

If a color ends in `ㅎ`, it is almost certainly irregular. This covers 90% of the cases you will use as a beginner.

⚠️

The 'Good' Trap

Never change `좋다` to `조애요`. It is the most common mistake. Keep that `ㅎ` alive in `좋아요`!

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Drop final `ㅎ` when adding suffixes starting with vowels like `-(으)ㄴ` or `-(으)면`.
  • Change stem vowels `ㅏ/ㅓ` to `ㅐ` when adding `-아/어` endings.
  • Change stem vowel `ㅑ` to `ㅒ` for words like `하얗다`.
  • Common exceptions like `좋다` and `많다` always stay regular.

Overview

Ever noticed how some Korean words seem to lose their tail? You are likely looking at a irregular verb. These words are a special group in Korean. Most of them describe colors or are demonstrative words. Think of words like "red," "blue," or "like this." When these words meet certain endings, the just disappears. It is like the is shy and hides when a vowel comes near. This rule is vital for sounding natural. If you say them the "regular" way, it sounds a bit stiff. You will use these every single day. Whether you are shopping for clothes or describing the sky, you need this. Let’s dive into the world of disappearing letters!

How This Grammar Works

The irregular rule is all about the final consonant. If a word stem ends in , it might be irregular. But wait, there is a catch! This only happens when the next part of the word starts with a vowel. If the next part starts with a consonant, the stays put. It is like a grammar traffic light. Vowel means "Go away, ㅎ!" Consonant means "Stay right there." There are two main changes to watch for. First, the drops out entirely. Second, the vowel in the stem often changes its shape. It usually turns into an or sound. This makes the word easier to say quickly. Even native speakers find the regular way too mouthful! Think of it as a phonetic shortcut for your brain.

Formation Pattern

  1. 1Identify the stem by removing from the verb. For example, 노랗다 becomes 노랗.
  2. 2Check the suffix you want to add. Does it start with a vowel?
  3. 3If adding -(으)ㄴ (to describe a noun), drop the . 노랗 + becomes 노란.
  4. 4If adding -(으)면 (if/when), drop the . 노랗 + becomes 노라면.
  5. 5If adding -아/어 (polite present tense), drop and change the vowel.
  6. 6For most stems, the vowel or changes to . 노랗다 becomes 노래요.
  7. 7For stems ending in like 하얗다, it changes to . 하얗다 becomes 하얘요.
  8. 8If the suffix starts with a consonant like -고 or -습니다, do nothing! 노랗고 stays 노랗고.

When To Use It

You will use this pattern constantly when describing things. Are you at a clothing store? You will need to say 까만 색 (black color) or 빨간 색 (red color). Are you talking about the weather? You might say the sky is 파래요 (blue). It is also used for demonstratives like 이렇다 (to be like this), 그렇다 (to be like that), and 저렇다 (to be like that over there). When you agree with someone, you say 그래요 (That’s right). This is actually the irregular rule in action! It is also used when asking "how" something is with 어떻다. When you ask 어때요? (How is it?), you are using this rule. It is the bread and butter of descriptive Korean.

When Not To Use It

Not every word ending in is a rebel. Some words are perfectly well-behaved and follow the regular rules. You must memorize these exceptions. The most common regular words are 좋다 (to be good), 많다 (to be many), 넣다 (to put in), and 낳다 (to give birth). These words keep their no matter what. If you say 좋아요, the is still there in the spelling! It doesn't turn into 조애요. Also, remember the rule only triggers with vowels. If you are using the formal -습니다 ending, the stays. 노랗습니다 is correct, not 노랩니다. Don't let the run away too early!

Common Mistakes

The biggest mistake is forgetting the vowel change. Many people try to say 노랗아요 or 노라요. Remember, it must be 노래요. It feels weird at first, but it’s the rule! Another slip-up is applying this to 좋다. Since 좋다 is so common, people want to make it irregular. Resist the urge! 좋다 is the king of regular verbs. Also, watch out for 하얗다 (white). Because it has a , it becomes 하얘요, not 하애요. It’s a tiny spelling difference, but it matters. Think of it like spelling "definitely" correctly in English. It shows you really know your stuff!

Contrast With Similar Patterns

You might confuse this with the irregular or irregular. In irregulars, the turns into . In irregulars, the just leaves and changes the vowel. They both happen before vowels, though! Also, compare it to regular verbs like 먹다. With 먹다, nothing disappears. The just slides over. With irregulars, the consonant is deleted from the team. It is a more drastic change than most other patterns. Just remember: is the only one that changes the stem vowel to or . That is your secret weapon for identifying it.

Quick FAQ

Q. Does this happen with all colors?

A. Most of them! 빨갛다, 노랗다, 파랗다, 까맣다, and 하얗다 all follow this.

Q. What about 까맣다 in the past tense?

A. It becomes 까맸어요. The drops and the vowel changes to plus the past tense marker.

Q. Is 어떻다 (how) irregular?

A. Yes! That is why we say 어때요? instead of 어떻아요?.

Q. Do I need this for the TOPIK test?

A. Absolutely. It appears in almost every reading and listening section.

Reference Table

Base Form Meaning With -(으)ㄴ (Adjective) With -아/어 (Polite)
빨갛다 Red 빨간 빨개요
노랗다 Yellow 노란 노래요
파랗다 Blue 파란 파래요
하얗다 White 하얀 하얘요
까맣다 Black 까만 까매요
이렇다 Like this 이런 이래요
어떻다 How 어떤 어때요
좋다 (Regular) Good 좋은 좋아요
💡

The Color Rule

If a color ends in `ㅎ`, it is almost certainly irregular. This covers 90% of the cases you will use as a beginner.

⚠️

The 'Good' Trap

Never change `좋다` to `조애요`. It is the most common mistake. Keep that `ㅎ` alive in `좋아요`!

🎯

Agreement Shortcut

The word `그래요` (Yes/Really) is just `그렇다` conjugated irregularly. Use it to sound like a local!

💬

Expressive Colors

Korean has many shades of colors. Words like `발그레하다` also follow this pattern, showing how descriptive the language is.

Beispiele

8
#1 하늘이 정말 파래요.

하늘이 정말 파래요.

Focus: 파래요

The sky is really blue.

The stem `파랗-` drops `ㅎ` and changes `ㅏ` to `ㅐ`.

#2 이런 스타일을 좋아해요.

이런 스타일을 좋아해요.

Focus: 이런

I like this kind of style.

The stem `이렇-` drops `ㅎ` and adds `ㄴ` to describe the noun.

#3 얼굴이 하얘요.

얼굴이 하얘요.

Focus: 하얘요

The face is white (pale).

Edge case: `하얗다` changes to `하얘요` because of the `ㅑ` vowel.

#4 기분이 어때요?

기분이 어때요?

Focus: 어때요

How do you feel?

The word `어떻다` is used to ask 'how' and follows the irregular rule.

#5 그렇습니다, 맞아요.

그렇습니다, 맞아요.

Focus: 그렇습니다

That is correct, yes.

Formal setting: Before `-습니다`, the `ㅎ` does NOT drop.

#6 ✗ 노랗아요 → ✓ 노래요

꽃이 노래요.

Focus: 노래요

The flower is yellow.

Mistake correction: Don't keep the `ㅎ` when adding `-아요`.

#7 ✗ 파란색이 좋애요 → ✓ 파란색이 좋아요

파란색이 좋아요.

Focus: 좋아요

I like the color blue.

Mistake correction: `좋다` is regular, so it never changes to `좋애요`.

#8 날씨가 그러면 안 갈래요.

날씨가 그러면 안 갈래요.

Focus: 그러면

If the weather is like that, I won't go.

Advanced: `그렇다` + `-(으)면` becomes `그러면`.

Teste dich selbst

Change the word '노랗다' to the correct polite present form.

저 바나나가 정말 ___.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: 노래요

For `ㅎ` irregulars, drop `ㅎ` and change the vowel `ㅏ` to `ㅐ` before `-아요`.

Choose the correct form of '어떻다' to describe the noun '사람'.

___ 사람을 찾고 있어요?

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: 어떤

When adding `-(으)ㄴ` to `어떻다`, the `ㅎ` drops and `ㄴ` is attached directly to the stem.

Identify the correct conjugation for the regular verb '좋다'.

이 노래가 정말 ___.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: 좋아요

`좋다` is a regular verb, so the `ㅎ` stays and it follows standard `-아요` rules.

🎉 Ergebnis: /3

Visuelle Lernhilfen

Irregular vs. Regular ㅎ

Irregular (빨갛다)
빨개요 It is red
빨간 Red (adj)
Regular (좋다)
좋아요 It is good
좋은 Good (adj)

The ㅎ Irregular Decision Tree

1

Does the stem end in ㅎ?

YES ↓
NO
Use regular conjugation rules.
2

Is it '좋다', '많다', '넣다', or '낳다'?

YES
Keep the ㅎ! (Regular)
NO
Proceed to vowel check.
3

Is the next suffix a vowel?

YES ↓
NO
Keep the ㅎ! (e.g., -고, -습니다)
4

Is the suffix -아/어?

YES
Drop ㅎ and change vowel to ㅐ/ㅒ.
NO
Drop ㅎ and add ㄴ/면.

Vowel Change Results

🎨

Changes to ㅐ

  • 노래 (Yellow)
  • 빨개 (Red)
  • 그래 (So/That way)
☁️

Changes to ㅒ

  • 하얘 (White)
  • 뽀얘 (Milky white)

Häufig gestellte Fragen

22 Fragen

It is mostly for ease of pronunciation. Saying 노랗아요 is clunky, so it evolved into 노래요 over time.

Not many! There are about 20-30 common ones, mostly colors and demonstratives like 이렇다.

No, 많다 is regular. You say 많아요, keeping the sound and spelling.

You drop the and add . It becomes 빨가면.

In 좋아요, the becomes silent when spoken, but it must stay in the spelling.

Yes! 어떻다 becomes 어때요 in the polite present tense.

It follows the same vowel change: 그랬어요. The drops and is used.

Yes! 노란 셔츠 (Yellow shirt) uses the irregular -(으)ㄴ form.

No, it is regular. You conjugate it as 낳아요.

Because the stem has . When combines with the irregular change, it becomes .

They both mean black, but 까맣다 is irregular while 검다 is regular.

The drops. So 그렇다 becomes 그러니까 (Therefore/Because it is so).

No. Before consonants like -고, it stays: 빨갛고.

Yes! It becomes 동그래요 or 동그란.

Think of the 'Big 4' regulars: 좋다, 많다, 넣다, 낳다. Most others are irregular.

In formal -습니다 style, the stays. In the formal -(으)ㄴ adjective form, it still drops.

Very often! You'll use 이런 (this kind of) and 이래서 (because of this) all the time.

파랗다 is the verb/adjective form, while 파란 is the form used directly before a noun.

Yes! 빨갛다 + -아서/어서 becomes 빨개서 (Because it is red).

Yes, this is a standard rule across all major Korean dialects.

It becomes 저래요. Just like 이래요 and 그래요.

It takes a little practice, but since it mostly affects colors, you will get used to it fast!

War das hilfreich?
Noch keine Kommentare. Sei der Erste, der seine Gedanken teilt!

Starte kostenlos mit dem Sprachenlernen

Kostenlos Loslegen