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Verbs in the Korean language come in last place in a clause. Verbs are the most complex part of speech, and a properly conjugated verb may stand on its own as a complete sentence. This article uses the Yale romanization in bold to show morphology. == Classification == Korean verbs are typically classified into four categories: action, state (or description), existential, and the copulas. *Action or processive verbs involve some action or internal movement. For a list of Korean action verbs, see *Stative or descriptive verbs are sometimes called adjectives. For a list of Korean stative verbs, see *Existential verbs convey the existence of something, or its presence in a particular location or a particular being's possession. This category was created for the verb iss ta 있다 "to exist" and its opposite, eops ta 없다 "not to exist." *Copulative verbs allow a non-verb to take verbal endings. In Korean this category was created for the affirmative and negative copula. The affirmative copula is i ta 이다 "to be," and the negative copula ani ta 아니다 "not to be." However, there are many other verbs in Korean that also serve to attach verb endings to nouns, most notably ha ta 하다 "to do." The distinction between action verbs and descriptive verbs is visible in verb conjugation in a few places. The copulas conjugate like stative verbs, but the existential verbs conjugate like action verbs. Some verbs can be either stative or active, depending on meaning. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Korean verbs」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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