In the last two classes, you learned 은/는 and 이/가.
However, there is no grammatical difference between 은/는 and 이/가
This is why people who are learning Korean find it difficult.
If you haven’t studied 은/는 and 이/가 yet, I recommend you to study first.
은/는 and 이/가
– | 은/는 | 이/가 |
---|---|---|
Meaning | “은/는” attaches to a noun to indicate that the noun is the subject of the sentence. | “이/가” attaches to a noun to indicate that the noun is the subject of the sentence. |
Form | – “은” is used when a noun ends with a consonant(받침). – “는” is used when a noun ends with a vowel. | – “이” is used when a noun ends with a consonant(받침). – “가” is used when a noun ends with a vowel. |
Particle | Topic Marker | Subject marker |
If you don’t know what batchim(받침) is. “Study Korean alphabet with batchim” will help you figure it out.
The difference is that is/is is a topic marker and this/that is a subject marker.
The common features are they are both particle and grammatically identical.
The difference is that 은/는 is a topic marker and 이/가 is a subject marker.
In other words, the difference between “은/는 and 이/가” is understanding the difference between topic markers and subject markers.
Topic Marker(은/는) and Subject Marker(이/가)
– | Topic Marker | Subject Marker |
---|---|---|
Meaning | Topic Marker indicate the topic of sentence, what the sentence is about. | Subject Marker indicate close relationship to the sentence, answering the question of who or which. |
In other words, 은/는(topic marker) indicates the action in the sentence, and 이/가(subject marker) indicates the subject(who or which) in the sentence.
Let’s learn how to distinguish them with some concrete examples.
How to distinguish between 은/는 and 이/가
Question: | 오늘 날씨가 어때요? | How’s the weather like? | |
Sentence: | 오늘 날씨가 흐려요. | It’s cloudy. |
We use Subject Markers because the answer to the question about what the weather is like is, after all, a question about “weather”.
Question: | 누가 미국에서 왔어요? | Who’s from the USA? | |
Sentence: | 제가 미국에서 왔어요. | I’m from USA. |
The question of “who” is from the United States is a question of who, so we use Subject Markers.
Question: | 누가 내 우유를 마셨어? | Who drank my milk? | |
Sentence: | 내가 마셨어. | I drank. |
The question of “who” drank the milk is also a question of who, so we use a subject marker.
Question: | 어느 나라에서 오셨어요? | Where are you from? | |
Sentence: | 저는 한국에서 왔어요. | I’m from South Korea. |
I’m curious about what country you’re from, so I use a Subject Marker.
Question: | 직업이 뭐예요? | What do you for a living? | |
Sentence: | 저는 의사예요. | I’m a doctor. |
I’m curious about what you do for a living, so I use a Topic Marker.
Question: | 몇 살이에요? | How old are you? | |
Sentence: | 저는 20살이에요. | I’m 20 years old. |
I’m curious about how old you are, so I use a Topic Marker.
In the "은/는" examples, we use Topic Markers because the question is not about who or what.
Thanks for reading.
If you have any questions, please leave a comment.