Korean Adjectives: Complete Guide to Descriptive Verbs (형용사)
Korean Adjectives: Complete Guide to Descriptive Verbs
Korean adjectives work nothing like English adjectives. In English, "big" is just a word you stick before a noun. In Korean, adjectives are descriptive verbs — they conjugate, they change form, and they follow grammar rules that will trip you up if you treat them like English.
This guide covers everything from basic conjugation to modifier forms, with 50+ essential adjectives you'll use daily.
Why Korean Adjectives Are Actually Verbs
In Korean, 크다 (keuda) doesn't mean "big." It means "to be big." Every Korean adjective is technically a verb, which is why linguists call them descriptive verbs (형용사, hyeongyongsa).
This has real consequences:
- They conjugate for tense (past, present, future)
- They conjugate for politeness level
- They don't need 이다 (to be) — the "being" is built in
English: The house is big. Korean: 집이 커요. (jib-i keoyo) — literally "house big-does"
No "is" needed. The adjective does the work of both the adjective and the verb.
Basic Adjective Conjugation
Korean adjectives follow the same 아/어 conjugation pattern as action verbs.
Present Tense (Polite: -아요/어요)
Rule: Remove 다 from the dictionary form, then add 아요 or 어요 based on the last vowel.
- Last vowel is ㅏ or ㅗ → add 아요
- Any other vowel → add 어요
| Dictionary Form | Meaning | Conjugated | Explanation |
|---|---|---|---|
| 크다 | to be big | 커요 | 크 + 어요 → 커요 (contraction) |
| 작다 | to be small | 작아요 | 작 + 아요 (last vowel ㅏ) |
| 예쁘다 | to be pretty | 예뻐요 | 예쁘 + 어요 → 예뻐요 (ㅡ drops) |
| 좋다 | to be good | 좋아요 | 좋 + 아요 (last vowel ㅗ) |
| 나쁘다 | to be bad | 나빠요 | 나쁘 + 아요 → 나빠요 (ㅡ drops) |
| 덥다 | to be hot (weather) | 더워요 | ㅂ irregular → 더우 + 어요 |
| 춥다 | to be cold (weather) | 추워요 | ㅂ irregular → 추우 + 어요 |
| 맛있다 | to be delicious | 맛있어요 | 맛있 + 어요 |
| 재미있다 | to be fun | 재미있어요 | 재미있 + 어요 |
Past Tense (-았/었어요)
Same vowel harmony rule, but with 았/었 + 어요:
| Dictionary Form | Meaning | Past Tense |
|---|---|---|
| 크다 | to be big | 컸어요 |
| 작다 | to be small | 작았어요 |
| 좋다 | to be good | 좋았어요 |
| 덥다 | to be hot | 더웠어요 |
| 예쁘다 | to be pretty | 예뻤어요 |
Example: 어제 날씨가 더웠어요. (eoje nalssiga deowosseoyo) — "The weather was hot yesterday."
Future/Guess (-(으)ㄹ 거예요)
Adjectives use this form less than action verbs, but it works for predictions:
- 내일 추울 거예요. (naeil chuul geoyeyo) — "It will probably be cold tomorrow."
- 이 영화 재미있을 거예요. (i yeonghwa jaemiisseul geoyeyo) — "This movie will probably be fun."
Adjectives as Noun Modifiers
This is where most learners mess up. When you put an adjective before a noun in Korean, the conjugation changes completely.
Present Modifier: -(으)ㄴ
To modify a noun in the present tense, add -ㄴ (after a vowel) or -은 (after a consonant) to the stem.
| Dictionary Form | Modifier Form | + Noun | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| 크다 | 큰 | 큰 집 | big house |
| 작다 | 작은 | 작은 가방 | small bag |
| 좋다 | 좋은 | 좋은 사람 | good person |
| 예쁘다 | 예쁜 | 예쁜 꽃 | pretty flower |
| 새롭다 | 새로운 | 새로운 친구 | new friend |
| 맛있다 | 맛있는* | 맛있는 음식 | delicious food |
*있다/없다 adjectives use -는 instead of -ㄴ — this is an important exception.
Past Modifier: Same as present for adjectives
Unlike action verbs, adjective modifiers don't change between present and past. Context tells the listener.
- 작은 집에서 살았어요. (jageun jibeseo sarasseoyo) — "I lived in a small house." (작은 is still present modifier form)
Future Modifier: -(으)ㄹ
- 좋을 날이 올 거예요. (joheul nari ol geoyeyo) — "Good days will come."
The ㅂ Irregular: Adjectives That Break the Rules
Many common Korean adjectives end in ㅂ and conjugate irregularly. The ㅂ drops and becomes 우:
| Dictionary | Polite Present | Modifier | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| 덥다 | 더워요 | 더운 | hot (weather) |
| 춥다 | 추워요 | 추운 | cold (weather) |
| 아름답다 | 아름다워요 | 아름다운 | beautiful |
| 어렵다 | 어려워요 | 어려운 | difficult |
| 쉽다 | 쉬워요 | 쉬운 | easy |
| 무겁다 | 무거워요 | 무거운 | heavy |
| 가볍다 | 가벼워요 | 가벼운 | light (weight) |
| 귀엽다 | 귀여워요 | 귀여운 | cute |
| 새롭다 | 새로워요 | 새로운 | new |
| 즐겁다 | 즐거워요 | 즐거운 | enjoyable |
Exception: 좁다 (narrow) is regular → 좁아요, 좁은. And 돕다 (to help) conjugates as 도와요, but that's an action verb.
Memorize the ㅂ irregulars. They're among the most common adjectives in Korean.
50 Essential Korean Adjectives
Appearance & Size
| Korean | Romanization | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 크다 | keuda | to be big |
| 작다 | jakda | to be small |
| 길다 | gilda | to be long |
| 짧다 | jjalpda | to be short (length) |
| 높다 | nopda | to be high/tall |
| 낮다 | natda | to be low |
| 넓다 | neolpda | to be wide |
| 좁다 | jopda | to be narrow |
| 두껍다 | dukkeopda | to be thick |
| 얇다 | yalpda | to be thin (objects) |
Emotions & Personality
| Korean | Romanization | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 기쁘다 | gippeuda | to be glad/happy |
| 슬프다 | seulpeuda | to be sad |
| 화나다 | hwanada | to be angry |
| 무섭다 | museopda | to be scary |
| 외롭다 | oeropda | to be lonely |
| 부끄럽다 | bukkeureopda | to be embarrassed |
| 피곤하다 | pigonhada | to be tired |
| 심심하다 | simsimhada | to be bored |
| 행복하다 | haengbokhada | to be happy |
| 착하다 | chakhada | to be kind/good-natured |
Quality & State
| Korean | Romanization | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 좋다 | jota | to be good |
| 나쁘다 | nappeuda | to be bad |
| 새롭다 | saeropda | to be new |
| 오래되다 | oraedoeda | to be old (things) |
| 깨끗하다 | kkaekkeuthada | to be clean |
| 더럽다 | deoropda | to be dirty |
| 안전하다 | anjeonhada | to be safe |
| 위험하다 | wiheomhada | to be dangerous |
| 중요하다 | jungyohada | to be important |
| 간단하다 | gandanhada | to be simple |
Taste & Food
| Korean | Romanization | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 맛있다 | masissda | to be delicious |
| 맛없다 | maseopsda | to be not tasty |
| 달다 | dalda | to be sweet |
| 짜다 | jjada | to be salty |
| 맵다 | maepda | to be spicy |
| 쓰다 | sseuda | to be bitter |
| 시다 | sida | to be sour |
| 싱겁다 | singeopda | to be bland |
Weather & Temperature
| Korean | Romanization | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 덥다 | deopda | to be hot (weather) |
| 춥다 | chupda | to be cold (weather) |
| 따뜻하다 | ttatteuthada | to be warm |
| 시원하다 | siwonhada | to be cool/refreshing |
Common Descriptors
| Korean | Romanization | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 많다 | manta | to be many/much |
| 적다 | jeokda | to be few/little |
| 빠르다 | ppareuda | to be fast |
| 느리다 | neurida | to be slow |
| 쉽다 | swipda | to be easy |
| 어렵다 | eoryeopda | to be difficult |
| 비싸다 | bissada | to be expensive |
| 싸다 | ssada | to be cheap |
Adjectives vs Action Verbs: Key Differences
Even though Korean adjectives conjugate like verbs, they have important grammatical differences:
1. Present tense modifier form
- Action verb: -는 (먹는 사람 = person who eats)
- Adjective: -(으)ㄴ (큰 사람 = big person)
This is the most common mistake learners make. 큰 is correct, not 크는.
2. -고 있다 (progressive)
- Action verb: ✅ 먹고 있어요 (is eating)
- Adjective: ❌ 크고 있어요 (is being big — ungrammatical)
Adjectives don't take the progressive form. They describe states, not ongoing actions.
3. Imperative (commands)
- Action verb: ✅ 먹으세요! (Please eat!)
- Adjective: ❌ 크세요! (Please be big! — doesn't work)
You can't command someone to be an adjective. Makes sense when you think about it.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Using 이에요/예요 with adjectives
❌ 이 음식이 맛있는 이에요. ✅ 이 음식이 맛있어요.
Korean adjectives already contain "to be." Adding 이다 is redundant and wrong.
Mistake 2: Wrong modifier form
❌ 맛있은 음식 (using -은 with 있다 adjective) ✅ 맛있는 음식 (있다/없다 adjectives use -는)
Mistake 3: Forgetting ㅂ irregular
❌ 덥은 날씨 ✅ 더운 날씨
The ㅂ drops in modifier form too, not just in polite speech.
Mistake 4: Translating "very" as 매우 in conversation
매우 is formal/written. In casual speech, use:
- 너무 (neomu) — "too/very" (most common in daily speech)
- 진짜 (jinjja) — "really" (casual)
- 정말 (jeongmal) — "really" (slightly more polite)
- 엄청 (eomcheong) — "super/incredibly"
진짜 맛있어요! sounds natural. 매우 맛있습니다 sounds like a textbook.
Practice Sentences
Try conjugating these in polite present tense, then as noun modifiers:
- 이 카페가 ___. (조용하다 — to be quiet)
- ___ 사람을 만났어요. (재미있다 — to be fun/interesting)
- 한국어가 ___? (어렵다 — to be difficult)
- ___ 날씨를 좋아해요. (따뜻하다 — to be warm)
- 이 가방이 너무 ___. (무겁다 — to be heavy)
Answers:
- 조용해요 / 조용한 카페
- 재미있는 (modifier uses -는 because of 있다)
- 어려워요 (ㅂ irregular)
- 따뜻한 (하다 adjective → 한)
- 무거워요 (ㅂ irregular)
How Chamelingo Teaches Adjectives
Chamelingo's curriculum introduces adjectives progressively across units, starting with basic descriptors in Unit 2 and building to irregular conjugations and complex modifier patterns by Unit 6.
Each adjective lesson includes:
- Conjugation drill tables — practice all forms (polite, casual, formal, modifier) in one exercise
- Audio with native speakers — hear the contracted forms that textbooks can't convey
- Sentence building exercises — arrange words into grammatically correct sentences using adjective forms
- Spaced repetition — FSRS-5 schedules reviews right before you'd forget each adjective
The PvP arena also tests adjective knowledge — you might need to quickly produce the modifier form of a ㅂ irregular under time pressure. Nothing burns irregular patterns into memory like competition.
What to Learn Next
Once you're comfortable with basic adjective conjugation, move on to:
- Korean Sentence Connectors — combine adjective clauses with -고, -(으)ㄴ데, etc.
- Korean Verb Conjugation — compare with action verb patterns
- Korean Honorifics Guide — adjective politeness levels in detail
- Korean Particles Guide — how particles interact with descriptive sentences
Master Korean adjectives with structured lessons and spaced repetition on Chamelingo. Start free today.