Anda di halaman 1dari 12

Ong Jia Ming Tan Chong Ee Terng Ee Wen

and

How do you count with your fingers?

Counting with Korean Fingers


The way Koreans count number with their fingers is to first open up their palm. They start by folding the thumb in for '1'. For '2' they fold in the index finger as well. Then the middle finger for '3', the ring finger for '4',

Korean Number System


In Korean, there are two number systems: Sino-Korean numbers and Native-Korean numbers. Knowing which system to use depends on the context and purpose. For example, when dealing with phone numbers, the Sino-

Sino-Korean Number System


Sino-Korean numbers are used for reciting phone numbers, counting money, telling time (minutes), and generally reciting number when numbers are not being counted in a sequential order. cardinal numbers

Sino-Korean Number System


Learning Sino-Korean numbers is very easy to do. If you know the numbers 1 through 10, you can count all the way to 99. This is because the numbers build on each. The only numbers that need to be memorised

Sino-Korean Number System


The number 11 is formed by saying the number 10 and then saying the number 1: 10: (sip) 1: (il) 10 + 1 = 11 (sip) + (il) = (sip-il)

Sino-Korean Number System


The number 12 is formed by saying the number 10 and then saying the number 2: 10: (sip) 2: (i) 10 + 2 = 12 (sip) + (i) = (sip-i)

Sino-Korean Number System


The number 20 is formed by saying the number 2 and then saying the number 10: 2: (i) 10: (sip) 2 x 10 = 20 (i) x (sip) = (i-sip)

Sino-Korean Number System


The number 24 is formed by saying the number 2, then 10, then 4: 2: (i) 10: (sip) 4: (sa) 2 x 10 + 4 = 24 (i) x (sip) + (sa)

This can continue up to 99.

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

yeong/gon / g il il sam sam o yuk chil pal gu sip sip-il sip-i

sip-o i-sip i-sip-il i-sip-i sam-sip sa-sip o-sip yuk-sip chil-sip pal-sip gu-sip gu-sip99 gu 100 baek

15 20 21 22 30 40 50 60 70 80 90

Anda mungkin juga menyukai