And: ~고 (Listing Actions and States)

~고 (나열)

Connectors

Overview

~고 is one of the most fundamental connectors in Korean. It joins two clauses together, similar to "and" in English. It can express:

  1. Listing -- describing multiple qualities or actions
  2. Sequential actions -- one thing happens, then another
  3. Simultaneous actions -- two things happening at the same time (less common, ~(으)면서 is preferred)

The beauty of ~고 is its simplicity: just attach it to the verb/adjective stem with no vowel harmony rules.

How to Form ~고

Remove -다 from the dictionary form and add ~고:

Dictionary form Stem + 고 Result
먹다 (eat) 먹 + 고 먹고
가다 (go) 가 + 고 가고
좋다 (good) 좋 + 고 좋고
예쁘다 (pretty) 예쁘 예쁘 + 고 예쁘고
하다 (do) 하 + 고 하고
크다 (big) 크 + 고 크고

No special rules. No vowel harmony. No irregular changes. The stem stays exactly as it is.

Part 1: Listing Qualities or States

Use ~고 to list multiple descriptions of the same subject, like "and" in English.

With adjectives

With nouns (using 이다)

After a noun ending in a consonant, use 이고. After a vowel, use .

Noun ending Form Example
Consonant (받침) 이고 학생이고
Vowel (no 받침) 의사

Part 2: Sequential Actions

When two actions happen one after another, ~고 can indicate "and then."

Tense marking

With ~고, tense is typically marked only on the final verb:

Correct Incorrect Why
갔어요 먹었 갔어요 Tense on final verb only
먹어요 씻어 먹어요 No conjugation before ~고

However, when emphasizing that the first action is completed before the second, you can put past tense on the first clause:

This is grammatically correct but less common in casual speech.

Part 3: Simultaneous Actions

~고 can sometimes indicate two things happening at the same time, but ~(으)면서 is more precise for simultaneous actions.

These could mean sequential or simultaneous depending on context. For clarity about simultaneous actions, prefer ~(으)면서.

~고 with Different Subjects

~고 can connect clauses with different subjects, unlike some other connectors:

~고 vs. Other Connectors

Connector Meaning Example
~고 And (neutral listing) 맛있어요 (cheap and delicious)
~(으)ㄴ/는데 And/But (background) 맛있어요 (it's cheap, and/but it's delicious)
~지만 But (contrast) 지만 맛없어요 (cheap but not tasty)
~아/어서 So/Because (cause) 샀어요 (it was cheap so I bought it)

Negative Form

~고 works naturally with negatives:

The negative (안/못/~지 않다) goes before each verb independently.

Common Patterns with ~고

~고 싶다 (want to)

This is a different grammar point, not the connector ~고. It means "want to": - 먹고 싶어요 (I want to eat) - 가고 싶어요 (I want to go)

Do not confuse this with the listing ~고.

~고 나서 (after doing)

Adding 나서 after ~고 emphasizes completion before the next action: - 밥을 먹고 나서 갔어요. (After eating, I went.) - 공부를 하고 나서 놀아요. (After studying, I play.)

~고 있다 (progressive)

Another separate grammar point meaning "am/is/are doing": - 먹고 있어요 (I am eating) - 공부하고 있어요 (I am studying)

Common Mistakes

Mistake Correction Why
먹어고 먹고 Don't conjugate the stem before ~고
좋아고 좋고 Attach ~고 directly to the stem
학생고 학생이고 Nouns with 받침 need 이고
가고 먹었어요 (for listing) 갔고 먹었어요 or 가고 먹었어요 Both work; tense usually on final verb

Summary

  1. ~고 connects clauses meaning "and" -- attach directly to the verb/adjective stem.
  2. No vowel harmony, no irregular changes -- the simplest connector.
  3. Use it for listing qualities (예쁘고 착해요), sequential actions (먹고 갔어요), or connecting different subjects.
  4. Tense is normally marked on the final verb only.
  5. After nouns: use 이고 (consonant) or (vowel).
  6. Do not confuse the connector ~고 with ~고 싶다 (want to) or ~고 있다 (progressive).

Examples

커피를 마시고 일해요

keopireul masigo ilhaeyo

I drink coffee and work

이 식당은 싸고 맛있어요

i sikdangeun ssago masisseoyo

This restaurant is cheap and delicious

샤워하고 잤어요

syawohago jasseoyo

I showered and then slept

한국어를 배우고 일본어도 배워요

hangugeoreul baeugo ilboneodo baeweoyo

I learn Korean and also learn Japanese

키가 크고 잘생겼어요

kiga keugo jalsaenggyeosseoyo

He is tall and handsome