I am sure this is one of the listening tasks that you can’t have enough! It is a listening game to practice dates – as long as it contains the month and the date.
Click the button at the beginning of the row to listen to the audio, then, write the date you just heard next to it.
This time, you can listen to the same audio as many times as you want.
Once all fields are complete, click the “Check” button to see your results.
Click “Show solution” to reveal solution.
Be careful with the format!The only correct form is: number of the month with 월 (no space inbetween) + space + number of the day with 일 (again, no space inbetween). Like “9월 9일” for “Sep 9”. Any typo in the format will mark your answer as not correct.
This short game lists some basic jobs. English meaning is provided next to each in case, you are learning the words right now. If already practicing them, try to skip the English word for them, and guess the meaning from the Korean word. That way, you can use the English meaning for checking your guess.
To complete this exercise, highlight the correct particle that fits the noun. Once all are complete, click the “Check” button to see your results. You may also click the “Show solution” button to check the answers.
To find more post on formal polite verb ending – use the ~습니다/~습니까 tag at the bottom of the page or the post.
Your task here is to complete the sentences using this verb ending. Once all of them are complete, click the “Check” button to see your results. The “Show solution” button will reveal the expected answers.
This listening is an easy one, more like a warm-up for practicing Sino-Korean numbers between 0 and 100. The only limitation is that you can play the same audio only twice.
In this exercise, you will need to write a number as an answer, don’t spell it.
Once all fields completed, click the “Check” button.
Click “Show solution” button to compare your answers to the expected ones.