Common Korean Adverbs (부사)

부사

Learning Objectives

What Are Adverbs?

Adverbs (부사, busa) are words that modify verbs, adjectives, or entire sentences. They tell us how, when, where, how often, or to what degree something happens.

In Korean, adverbs typically come before the word they modify:

Position Example Translation
Adverb + Verb 빨리 달려요 run quickly
Adverb + Adjective 매우 예뻐요 very pretty
Adverb + Sentence 항상 이렇게 해요 always do it this way

Frequency Adverbs (빈도 부사)

Frequency adverbs describe how often something happens. They are arranged from most frequent to least frequent:

Korean Romanization English Frequency
항상 hangsang always 100%
neul always / invariably 100%
보통 botong usually / normally ~80%
자주 jaju often / frequently ~70%
종종 jongjong from time to time ~50%
가끔 gakkeum sometimes ~30%
별로 (+ neg.) byeollo not particularly ~15%
거의 (+ neg.) geoui hardly / almost never ~5%
전혀 (+ neg.) jeonhyeo not at all 0%

Examples with Frequency Adverbs

Korean English
항상 일찍 일어나요. I always wake up early.
자주 운동해요. I exercise often.
가끔 영화를 봐요. I sometimes watch movies.
별로 안 좋아해요. I don't particularly like it.
거의 안 먹어요. I hardly eat.
전혀 모르겠어요. I don't understand at all.

Important: 별로, 거의, 전혀 with Negatives

These three adverbs require a negative form (안, 못, 없다, 모르다):

Correct Incorrect
별로 좋아해요. ~~별로 좋아해요.~~
거의 가요. ~~거의 가요.~~ (means "I almost go" which is different)
전혀 몰라요. ~~전혀 알아요.~~
전혀 없어요. ~~전혀 있어요.~~

Degree Adverbs (정도 부사)

Degree adverbs express how much or to what extent:

Korean Romanization English Intensity
매우 maeu very (formal/written) Strong
아주 aju very / quite Strong
정말 jeongmal really / truly Strong
진짜 jinjja really (casual) Strong
너무 neomu too much / very (casual) Strong
kkwae fairly / quite Medium
jom a little / somewhat Mild
조금 jogeum a little / slightly Mild
약간 yakgan slightly / a bit Mild
많이 mani a lot / much Quantity

Examples with Degree Adverbs

Korean English
이 음식이 매우 맛있어요. This food is very delicious. (formal)
아주 좋아요. It's very good.
정말 감사합니다. Thank you truly.
진짜 예뻐요! Really pretty! (casual)
한국어가 조금 어려워요. Korean is a little difficult.
많이 먹으세요. Please eat a lot.

너무: Two Meanings

너무 originally means "too much" (excessively), but in modern casual speech it is also used to mean "very" (positively):

Korean Meaning Context
너무 비싸요. It's too expensive. Negative (original meaning)
너무 매워요. It's too spicy. Negative
너무 좋아요! It's so great! Positive (casual usage)
너무 맛있어요! It's so delicious! Positive (casual usage)

In formal writing or tests, use 너무 only for the negative "too much" meaning. For "very" in formal contexts, use 매우 or 아주.

좀 vs. 조금

Both mean "a little," but 좀 is the shortened, more casual form:

Context 조금
Casual speech 좀 기다려요. 조금 기다려요.
Softening requests 좀 도와주세요. (Please help a bit.) --
Amount 좀 먹었어요. 조금 먹었어요.

좀 is very commonly used to soften requests and make them more polite:

Korean English
좀 도와주세요. Could you help me, please?
좀 봐 주세요. Could you take a look, please?
좀 쉬어도 돼요? Can I rest a bit?

Time Adverbs (시간 부사)

Time adverbs express when something happens relative to the present:

Korean Romanization English
이미 imi already
벌써 beolsseo already (with surprise)
아직 ajik still / not yet
got soon
방금 banggeum just now
바로 baro right away / immediately
먼저 meonjeo first / beforehand
나중에 najunge later
드디어 deudieo finally / at last
다시 dasi again

Examples with Time Adverbs

Korean English
이미 먹었어요. I already ate.
벌써 끝났어요? It's already over? (surprised)
아직 안 왔어요. They haven't come yet.
아직 먹고 있어요. I'm still eating.
곧 도착해요. I'll arrive soon.
방금 전화했어요. I just called.
바로 갈게요. I'll go right away.
먼저 가세요. Please go first.
나중에 만나요. Let's meet later.
드디어 끝났어요! It's finally over!
다시 한번 말해 주세요. Please say it once more.

이미 vs. 벌써

Both mean "already," but 벌써 carries surprise or unexpectedness:

Korean Nuance
이미 알고 있었어요. I already knew. (neutral fact)
벌써 왔어요? You're here already? (wow, so fast!)
벌써 세 시예요? It's already 3 o'clock? (time flew!)

아직 in Positive vs. Negative

Usage Example English
Positive: "still" 아직 일하고 있어요. I'm still working.
Negative: "not yet" 아직 안 끝났어요. It hasn't ended yet.

Manner Adverbs (양태 부사)

Manner adverbs describe how an action is performed:

Korean Romanization English
빨리 ppalli quickly / fast
천천히 cheoncheonhi slowly
jal well
mot poorly / cannot
같이 gachi together
혼자 honja alone
열심히 yeolsimhi hard / diligently
조용히 joyonghi quietly
정확히 jeonghwakhi exactly / precisely
분명히 bunmyeonghi clearly / obviously

Examples with Manner Adverbs

Korean English
빨리 오세요! Come quickly!
천천히 걸어요. I walk slowly.
한국어를 잘 해요. I speak Korean well.
노래를 못 해요. I can't sing. / I sing poorly.
같이 공부해요. Let's study together.
혼자 살아요. I live alone.
열심히 공부해요. I study hard.
조용히 해 주세요. Please be quiet.

잘 in Common Expressions

잘 (well) is one of the most versatile Korean adverbs:

Korean English
잘 먹겠습니다. I will eat well. (said before eating)
잘 먹었습니다. I ate well. (said after eating)
잘 지내요? Are you doing well?
잘 자요. Sleep well. / Good night.
잘 가요. Go well. / Goodbye. (to someone leaving)
잘 모르겠어요. I don't really know.
잘 했어요! Well done!

잘 못 vs. 잘못

Be careful with spacing:

Korean Meaning
잘 못 해요 (two words) I can't do it well.
잘못 해요 (one word) I do it wrong. / I make a mistake.
잘 못 먹어요 I can't eat well.
잘못 먹었어요 I ate the wrong thing.

Forming Adverbs from Adjectives

Many Korean adverbs are formed from adjectives using the suffix ~게:

Adjective Meaning + 게 → Adverb
빠르다 fast 빠르게 (quickly)
느리다 slow 느리게 (slowly)
깨끗하다 clean 깨끗하게 (cleanly)
조용하다 quiet 조용하게 (quietly)
행복하다 happy 행복하게 (happily)
정확하다 accurate 정확하게 (accurately)

Some adjectives also have a special ~히 adverb form:

Adjective ~게 Form ~히 Form
조용하다 조용하게 조용히
정확하다 정확하게 정확히
분명하다 분명하게 분명히
깨끗하다 깨끗하게 깨끗이

Both ~게 and ~히 forms are correct, but ~히 forms are slightly more natural in spoken Korean for certain words.

Adverb Placement

Korean adverbs generally come before the verb they modify:

Pattern Example English
Time + Frequency + Manner + Verb 매일 항상 빨리 일어나요. I always wake up quickly every day.
Subject + Adverb + Verb 저는 잘 모르겠어요. I don't really know.
Adverb + Object + Verb 빨리 밥을 먹어요. I eat rice quickly.

Adverb placement is flexible, but before the verb is the default position.

Adverb Pairs

Positive Negative
잘 (well) 못 (poorly / can't)
빨리 (fast) 천천히 (slowly)
많이 (a lot) 조금 (a little)
항상 (always) 전혀 (not at all)
이미 (already) 아직 (still / not yet)
같이 (together) 혼자 (alone)
먼저 (first) 나중에 (later)

Practice

Fill in the appropriate adverb:

  1. 커피를 ___ 마셔요. (I always drink coffee.) → 항상
  2. ___ 오세요! (Come quickly!) → 빨리
  3. 한국어를 ___ 알아요. (I know a little Korean.) → 조금
  4. ___ 안 먹었어요. (I haven't eaten yet.) → 아직
  5. ___ 공부해요. (I study hard.) → 열심히
  6. ___ 갈게요. (I'll go right away.) → 바로
  7. ___ 모르겠어요. (I don't understand at all.) → 전혀

Vocabulary

Word Romanization Meaning
항상 hangsang always
자주 jaju often / frequently
가끔 gakkeum sometimes / occasionally
거의 geoui almost / hardly (with negative)
전혀 jeonhyeo not at all (must pair with negative)
매우 maeu very (formal)
아주 aju very / quite
너무 neomu too (much) / very (casual)
조금 jogeum a little / slightly
많이 mani a lot / much
이미 imi already
아직 ajik still / not yet
got soon
방금 banggeum just now
빨리 ppalli quickly / fast
천천히 cheoncheonhi slowly
jal well
같이 gachi together

Examples

항상 아침에 커피를 마셔요.

hangsang achime keopireul masyeoyo.

I always drink coffee in the morning.

한국어를 조금 할 수 있어요.

hangugeoreul jogeum hal su isseoyo.

I can speak a little Korean.

이미 먹었어요.

imi meogeosseoyo.

I already ate.

천천히 말해 주세요.

cheoncheonhi malhae juseyo.

Please speak slowly.

같이 가요!

gachi gayo!

Let's go together!

Quiz

5 questions

1. Which adverb means 'sometimes'?

2. Which adverb MUST be paired with a negative?

3. ___ 말해 주세요. (Please speak slowly.)

4. What does 이미 mean?

5. 한국어를 ___ 해요. (I speak Korean well.)

Key Takeaways