Target level
From upper beginners to advanced learners
What can you achieve through this course?
- Learn all the official rules of Korean pronunciation
- Learn the correct pronunciation of words or phrases that Korean learners often make mistakes when pronouncing
- Practice along with a native speaker to improve your pronunciation
- Take quizzes designed to advance your listening and help you differentiate sounds
Trailer + Sample lesson
Lecturers
Course language
English
What can you find inside the course?
- 25 video lessons
- A PDF file of lesson notes
Customer reviews
"Hands down the best money I spent on TTMIK products. I learned so much. (Rather I had to unlearn things to relearn them.) While I may not say everything correctly 100% of the time yet since I am still memorizing all the rules and still training myself to forget what I was taught before, I have noticed I am starting to hear the sounds (or what letter they are pronounced like) correctly more often than I was before. Plus when I forget a rule while I'm studying and the word I hear sounds different from what I said I now understand why and I know there is just a rule there that I just need more practice with. It is a much better and more reassuring situation than before where someone was telling me "this is how this one word is pronounced but that is all you're going to get for this lesson. figure the rest out for yourself." Thank you TTMIK."
"Love these. The videos are actually enjoyable to watch and make studying fun. Honestly! It's like lightbulbs flashing on when I learn the mysteries of when things don't sound like they're written. Everyone should watch this. You'll save yourself a LOT of confusion and stress."
Table of contents
- Diphthongs: Why don't Koreans pronounce ์ as ์?
- Long/Short Vowel Sounds: Are ๋(snow) and ๋(eye) pronounced differently?
- Batchim: ๋น = ๋น = ๋น = ๋น = ๋น = ๋น
- Compound Consonants as Batchim: Should I pronounce the ใน or ใฑ in ์ฝ๋ค?
- Assimilation Part 1: ๋ซํ๋ค and ๋ค์น๋ค are pronounced exactly the same way.
- Assimilation Part 2: ใด always becomes ใน when it's with ใน.
- Fortition Part 1: Why is ๋ฐ์ฃผ์ฐ pronounced ๋ฐ์ญ์ฐ?
- Fortition Part 2: Why is ๊ฐ ๊ฑฐ์์ pronounced ๊ฐ ๊บผ์์?
- ใด Insertion: Why isn't ๊ฝ์ pronounced ๊ผฌ์นฒ?
- ใ Insertion: Why isn't ๋๋ญ์ pronounced ๋๋ฌด์ถ?
- Ending Consonant Sounds: Ignore the romanizations.
- ใด vs N
- ใน vs L
- ใท vs D
- Differentiating ใ , ใ , and ใ
- Differentiating ใฑ, ใ , and ใฒ
- Differentiating ใ , ใ , and ใ
- Differentiating ใ and ใ
- Differentiating ใท, ใ , and ใธ
- ์ค vs ์ด
- ์ vs ์ฌ
- ์ผ vs ์ฐ
- When Spelling and Pronunciation Are Different
- English Loan Words
- Korean Words English Speakers Know

This is very interesting and helpful course. I still have a problem: I can hear clearly difference between ์ค and ์ด, because I hear ์ค more like an U-sound. But.. what kind of difference is between ์ฐ and ์ค or ์ and ์? It would be nice to hear the difference same way like you have done in lessons 20-22.
Thank you for your feedback! ๐
We recommend our book “How to Sound Like a Native Korean Speaker” as it would help you differentiate the words.
Trรจs bons cours. Les rรจgles de prononciation sont trรจs bien expliquรฉes car trรจs dรฉtaillรฉes, les exemples sont nombreux. Merci beaucoup.
Thank you for your comment! ๐
This course was awesome! I learned ํ๊ธ using Spanish (my native language) resources because I found that Spanish pronunciation is closer to Korean than English’s (imo) but none of them were as thorough and easy to follow as this course. The insertion, fortition and assimilation rules were a lot to take in but with practice it’ll become easier. A LOT of examples to really drive the point of the lesson home. I can already tell my reading has improved so thank you so much ๐
You are welcome! ๐ Thank you for your feedback ๐
Finally. This was what I was looking for all along. It seemed like no matter how much I asked, no one seemed to understand me. Ty.
You’re so welcome!
Just finished this course and I so like it. Reading is something that I find difficult because memorizing the rules in pronunciation is a headache haha. I hope that you will provide more pronunciation course for beginners.
Glad you liked it!
I loved this lesson. I could tell, when I listened to the words in other lessons that the pronunciation was not the way it was written and this was extremely helpful. The sample sentences are still a little to fast for me, but I read them first and then I listen. I will catch on to the natural pace of the spoken Korean language at some point and then you won’t be able to wipe that smile of my face. LOVED IT!!!!! THIS teaches the principle of why the pronunciation is different from the written word and I believe teaching the foundation will help me excel.
Thanks for studying Korean with us! ๐ Keep up the great work โบ๏ธ
Very useful, pleasant and interesting.
์ ๋ง ์ฌ๋ฏธ์๊ณ ์ข์์.
๊ฐ์ฌํฉ๋๋ค.
Thank you for your comment. ๐
๊ฐ์ฌํฉ๋๋ค. ์ฆ๊ฒ๊ฒ ๊ณต๋ถํฉ์๋ค!
Talk To Me In Korean = ์ฌ๋ฏธ์์ด์.
You=๋ฉ์ ธ์!
๊ฐ์ฌํฉ๋๋ค. ๐
This guide was extremely helpful for me. I have just finished it. The first few lessons were things I had already come across through other sources on korean pronunciation rules, but so much was new to me and things I’d never seen.
Lesson 8 on fortition rules (pt2) was especially englightening to me, because it answered a lot of questions I had about some words having tensed consonant pronunciation after ใน or ใ batchim. And I had never found anything about this online before, even when specifically searching for it.
The content in lesson 9 and 10 definitely seems more advanced, as they’re about pronunciation rules that only apply if a word is a certain type, eg. compound word/derivative, and if it’s your first time seeing a word, you may not know if it is one of those. It’ll probably be something I learn as I come across more words and their pronunciations, but good to be aware of.
There is also some confusion I have when I see that certain words, that seem like none of the rules apply to, have random tensed consonant pronunciations. eg ํ๊ถ๋ [ํ๊ฟ๋] but that might be something I learn as I come across new words and have to accept there’s no explicit rule for. Is it always true, however, that loan words that end in ์ค are pronunced like ์ฐ though. Like ๋ฒ์ค [๋ฒ์ฐ] and ์ฃผ์ค[์ฃผ์ฐ] (mentioned in load words lesson).
One thing I’d like to point out and ask about the course information is, in a couple lessons, you have rules about how to pronounce the next syllable if the previous batchim is ใ , or a batchim that is pronounced like ใ ; and in that list of consonants that are pronounced like ใ you guys include ใผ. But from the lesson on compound consonants (lesson 4), ใผ was introduced as one of the ones that is pronounced as the first letter (ie ใน) and so wouldn’t be applicable to rules about a ใ (sounding) batchim. Like the rule about ใ becoming ใ when followed by ใ ,ใด. A word like ์๋ค, would be pronounced like ์๋ค, and not ์๋ค or ์๋ค, correct?
Other than that, thank you so much for the guide and all the hard work gone in to it! It has truly been indespensable in helping my korean pronunciation.
It is very interesting to read your analysis of the lessons. ๐
There are some exceptions for ๋ฐ์นจ ใผ. For example, โ๋์ฃฝํ๋ค is pronounced as [๋์ญ์นด๋ค]โ.
Thank you for your nice comment. Enjoy studying with us!
I’m only 5 lessons in and my premium subscription just paid for itself, this is so useful!!! Explained in a really clear, concise way, I love that these lessons are so short. Perfect for a refresher!
Thanks for your comment ! ๐ We keep trying to make more efficient courses like this ! ^^
Hello! This is a great course for anyone starting to learn Korean who are constantly left dumbfounded when a syllable isn’t read the way you think it should be… (like me). I have definitely learned a lot. Thank you so much to the team behind this, I will absolutely recommend it to anyone I know who is struggling!
When it comes to comparing pronunciation, I’ve talked to some of my friends who are also learning Korean and we are all struggling with differentiating ใ and ใ . We all find them easy to differentiate from the other vowels, but sometimes struggle when they are spoken together. I should have liked to see a video on this, as I feel like we surely can’t be the only ones struggling with these particular sounds. (We’re all Scandinavian, so perhaps our language background is part of the issue?)
Glad that you learned a lot from this course ๐ I’d recommend you listen to lesson 20,22 and repeat the sounds of ‘ใ ’ and ‘ใ ’ !
I’m sure it will be very helpful ! ํ์ดํ ~!
I have a question, from my listening, I think that when speaking fast:
– ใด becomes ใ before ใ ex. ๋ฌธ๋ฒ = ๋ญ๋ฒ
– ใด becomes ใ before ใ ex. ํ ๋ฒ ๋งํด = ํจ ๋ฒ ๋งํด
When speaking slowly it does not seem so, but when speaking fast, that change seems apparent to me. Am I hallucinating? Thank you so much!
You’re completely right! ๐
I enjoyed the lessons very much. Cassie is really cute in this video too :p
Have to say, for advanced level, lessons 12-22 are mostly basic stuff which would be more recommended for beginners. I am wondering for lesson 23, is it ok to pronounce the way it is written or to speak the way native Koreans pronounce them, or are both correct? Would be good to mention that in the video ๐ Thank you TTMIK for the lessons, the content is much better than any private Korean tuition which I had so far!
Some are correct even grammatically but the others are not.
When it comes to spoken Korean, we’d say both are totally fine!
I always wondered why some words were pronounced differently and how to pronounce other ones. Now I can say I understand the reason and how to pronounce them correctly. Amazing!
We’re glad that it helps your pronunciation! Keep up the good work!
I love how there is SO MUCH content in every course! the quality and quantity information is superb! thank you TTMIK team!
Thank you for learning Korean with us! ๐
So grateful for the concise grouping of all of these pronunciation rules! Good stuff for people even at intermediate levels of learning who maybe haven’t noticed some pronunciation rules that can help out with fluency in the long run. Great job by everyone!
Thank you for studying with us!:)
Thank you so much for the amazing course!
Thank you so much for the amazing support!
Hands down the best money I spent on TTMIK products. I learned so much. (Rather I had to unlearn things to relearn them.) While I may not say everything correctly 100% of the time yet since I am still memorizing all the rules and still training myself to forget what I was taught before, I have noticed I am starting to hear the sounds (or what letter they are pronounced like) correctly more often than I was before. Plus when I forget a rule while I’m studying and the word I hear sounds different from what I said I now understand why and I know there is just a rule there that I just need more practice with. It is a much better and more reassuring situation than before where someone was telling me “this is how this one word is pronounced but that is all you’re going to get for this lesson. figure the rest out for yourself.” Thank you TTMIK.
Hi, I’m Hwayeon from TalkToMeInKorean. We are glad to hear that you’ve improved a lot!!! Thank you for studying with us:)
Love these. The videos are actually enjoyable to watch and make studying fun. Honestly! It’s like lightbulbs flashing on when I learn the mysteries of when things don’t sound like they’re written. Everyone should watch this. You’ll save yourself a LOT of confusion and stress.
Thanks for the lovely comment! ๐