What Are Double Final Consonants (겹받침) in Korean?

 In Korean, a syllable usually ends with a single final consonant (받침).

However, sometimes you will see two consonants in the final position.
Double final consonants
These are called 겹받침 (gyeop-batchim).
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.

✅ What Is a Double Final Consonant?

A double final consonant is when two consonants appear together at the end of a Korean syllable block.
For example:

These combinations are fixed and must be memorized as part of Korean spelling.



✅ How Are They Pronounced?

Usually, only one consonant is pronounced.
The second one is often silent or only pronounced when followed by a vowel in the next syllable.

Examples:

  • 읽다 (to read) → pronounced like [익따] (ik-tta)

  • 앉다 (to sit) → pronounced like [안따] (an-tta)

  • 밟다 (to step) → pronounced like [밥따] (bap-tta)

💡 But when the next syllable starts with a vowel, the second consonant might move to the next syllable.





👇👇👇👇👇See it in the video👇👇👇👇👇

https://youtube.com/shorts/kDULhANZ6VQ?si=VOTgFRvXGY7JN8Xt



.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

Don’t worry about memorizing all the pronunciation rules at first.
Just recognize these combinations and get used to seeing them in words.
We’ll study their detailed pronunciation step by step later!



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

How to say "Hello" in Korean: 안녕하세요 [an-nyeong-ha-se-yo]

Korean Greetings: Leaving & Returning

Korean Expressions with “밥(bap)”