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0 이 is used when trying to portray a possible comparison like Used in academic or formal writings, often in the indicative mood This was a question from the definition stage of this proposal why is the korean name 이 written as lee in english?
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The particle (이)야 and its exact meaning ask question asked 9 years, 2 months ago modified 9 years, 2 months ago Sounds formal, because you do not elide the “이” when you can The difference between 는/은 and 가/이 finally clicked for me when it was explained in this video
Indicates information that has been previously mentioned or is clear from context
The topic being elaborated on. In both of these sentences, it looks like 이/가 is being used on the verb object, not the subject It seems to have a kind of 'emphatic' or 'indicative' flavour, but why would we not just use 는/은 for that (그 것은 알고 싶다 , 사과는 먹고 싶어요)? Here 이 is not a particle, but a suffix added to human's name whose last character has final consonant. (See here) 지현이 아영이 아름이 정복이 *철수이 *영희이 When someone call one's full name, adding the suffix '이' is unnatural. 김아영은 눈 깜짝할 사이 사라졌다.
There is an argument that 필요로 하다 directly came from to be in need of, which means that it is advisable to avoid such usage We can just use 이/가 필요하다 instead of 을/를 필요로 하다. I have read the following sentences: 의사가 뭐라고 말했어요? 이 약을 하루에 두 번 먹어야 한다고 말했어요 Why does the former sentence use 라고 while the latter uses 다고? My dictionary says both functions like a conjunction tha. I saw the following sentence
I know the meaning, which is whose is this toy?
However, i don't know what is the original verb of 거예요 It seems that there is no verb registered a.