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Zero to Hangul · № 34

The 50 Most Common Korean Verbs, Grouped by Conjugation Pattern

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The most common Korean verbs — 가다 (go), 먹다 (eat), 하다 (do), 보다 (see), 있다 (to be/have) — carry more of a conversation than any noun list ever will, because a Korean sentence lives or dies on its verb. This guide lists 50 high-frequency verbs grouped by conjugation family, each with its 해요-form, so the patterns click instead of feeling like 50 random exceptions.

Open any "top 100 Korean words" list and count the nouns. It's usually 70 or 80 of them — 학교, 친구, 집, 사랑 — sitting there being decorative, because a noun without a verb isn't a sentence. It's a flashcard.

This list flips that ratio. Fifty verbs, picked for how often you'd actually reach for them mid-conversation, sorted by the conjugation pattern that governs each one — because once you notice that 듣다, 걷다 and 묻다 all break the exact same way, you've stopped memorizing three separate exceptions and started recognizing one rule.

Why 50 verbs beat 200 nouns for actual speaking

A verb is the one word a Korean sentence cannot survive without. Subjects vanish constantly — 아침 먹었어요? has no "you" anywhere in it, and everyone still understands it as "did you eat breakfast?" Objects disappear too, the moment they're obvious from context. What never disappears is the verb, sitting at the very end, because the verb is where the actual grammar lives: tense, politeness level, whether it's a question or a statement. Learn 50 verbs well and you can describe almost anything happening to you today. Learn 200 nouns and you can label the room.

The three irregulars to flag before you start

Korean has four verb-stem changes worth knowing by name, and almost every irregular verb you'll ever meet belongs to one of them. Before the full list, meet the three biggest offenders — learn these three patterns cold and you've effectively covered every irregular verb you'll run into for the next year of study.

들어요

deu-reo-yo

(I) listen / hear — from 듣다

ㄷ irregular: the stem's ㄷ becomes ㄹ before a vowel ending.

도와요

do-wa-yo

(I) help — from 돕다

ㅂ irregular: the ㅂ drops and adds 오/우 — 와요 here, not the usual 워요.

몰라요

mol-la-yo

(I) don't know — from 모르다

르 irregular: 르 doubles into ㄹㄹ before a vowel ending.

받아요

ba-da-yo

(I) receive — from 받다

Totally regular, for contrast — this ㄷ just stays put.

Same-looking stems, three different rules — this is the whole irregular-verb problem in four lines.

All 50, grouped by the pattern that governs them

Regular verbs first — the ones that just tack on /어요 with zero drama. Then 하다 verbs, an entire family that behaves identically every single time. Then the four irregular clusters from above, each with its full member list.

Regular verbs — people, places, senses

Verb해요-formMeaning
가다 (ga-da)가요 (ga-yo)go
오다 (o-da)와요 (wa-yo)come
보다 (bo-da)봐요 (bwa-yo)see, watch
만나다 (man-na-da)만나요 (man-na-yo)meet
기다리다 (gi-da-ri-da)기다려요 (gi-da-ryeo-yo)wait
서다 (seo-da)서요 (seo-yo)stand
앉다 (an-da)앉아요 (an-ja-yo)sit
웃다 (ut-da)웃어요 (u-seo-yo)laugh
울다 (ul-da)울어요 (u-reo-yo)cry
주다 (ju-da)줘요 (jwo-yo)give
받다 (bat-da)받아요 (ba-da-yo)receive
알다 (al-da)알아요 (a-ra-yo)know
배우다 (bae-u-da)배워요 (bae-wo-yo)learn
가르치다 (ga-reu-chi-da)가르쳐요 (ga-reu-chyeo-yo)teach

Regular verbs — daily routine

Verb해요-formMeaning
자다 (ja-da)자요 (ja-yo)sleep
일어나다 (i-reo-na-da)일어나요 (i-reo-na-yo)wake up, get up
먹다 (meok-da)먹어요 (meo-geo-yo)eat
마시다 (ma-si-da)마셔요 (ma-syeo-yo)drink
읽다 (ik-da)읽어요 (il-geo-yo)read
씻다 (ssit-da)씻어요 (ssi-seo-yo)wash (up)
사다 (sa-da)사요 (sa-yo)buy
팔다 (pal-da)팔아요 (pa-ra-yo)sell
만들다 (man-deul-da)만들어요 (man-deu-reo-yo)make
놀다 (nol-da)놀아요 (no-ra-yo)play, hang out
살다 (sal-da)살아요 (sa-ra-yo)live
끝나다 (kkeun-na-da)끝나요 (kkeun-na-yo)end, finish
입다 (ip-da)입어요 (i-beo-yo)wear
잡다 (jap-da)잡아요 (ja-ba-yo)catch, hold

하다 verbs — always the same move

Almost any noun in Korean can become a verb by gluing 하다 onto the end — 공부 (study, the noun) plus 하다 becomes 공부하다 (to study). Learn that 하다 always conjugates to 해요 and you've unlocked conjugation for thousands of noun-plus-하다 combinations, not just the eleven below.

Verb해요-formMeaning
하다 (ha-da)해요 (hae-yo)do
말하다 (mal-ha-da)말해요 (mal-hae-yo)speak, say
생각하다 (saeng-ga-ka-da)생각해요 (saeng-ga-kae-yo)think
좋아하다 (jo-a-ha-da)좋아해요 (jo-a-hae-yo)like
사랑하다 (sa-rang-ha-da)사랑해요 (sa-rang-hae-yo)love
일하다 (il-ha-da)일해요 (il-hae-yo)work
공부하다 (gong-bu-ha-da)공부해요 (gong-bu-hae-yo)study
운동하다 (un-dong-ha-da)운동해요 (un-dong-hae-yo)exercise
요리하다 (yo-ri-ha-da)요리해요 (yo-ri-hae-yo)cook
전화하다 (jeon-hwa-ha-da)전화해요 (jeon-hwa-hae-yo)call, phone
시작하다 (si-ja-ka-da)시작해요 (si-ja-kae-yo)start

irregular — walk, listen, ask

Verb해요-formMeaning
듣다 (deut-da)들어요 (deu-reo-yo)listen, hear
걷다 (geot-da)걸어요 (geo-reo-yo)walk
묻다 (mut-da)물어요 (mu-reo-yo)ask

irregular — help, lie down, grill

Verb해요-formMeaning
돕다 (dop-da)도와요 (do-wa-yo)help
눕다 (nup-da)누워요 (nu-wo-yo)lie down
굽다 (gup-da)구워요 (gu-wo-yo)grill, bake

irregular — the doubling family

Verb해요-formMeaning
모르다 (mo-reu-da)몰라요 (mol-la-yo)not know
부르다 (bu-reu-da)불러요 (bul-leo-yo)call, sing
자르다 (ja-reu-da)잘라요 (jal-la-yo)cut

irregular — the vanishing vowel

Verb해요-formMeaning
쓰다 (sseu-da)써요 (sseo-yo)write, use
끄다 (kkeu-da)꺼요 (kkeo-yo)turn off

Dictionary form alone won't get you through a sentence

Notice every verb above got two forms, not one. That's not padding — 가다 by itself is exactly as much a sentence as "to go" is in English, which is to say, not one. You need the 해요-form, or one of its close cousins, to actually speak. Dictionary-only study is exactly why some learners can ace a flashcard app on 50 verbs and still stall out ordering coffee.

Here's a few of these doing real work, mid-conversation, instead of sitting in a list.

Eden

오늘 저녁에 뭐 해요?

o-neul jeo-nyeo-ge mwo hae-yo?

What are you doing this evening?

아직 몰라요. 왜요?

a-jik mol-la-yo. wae-yo?

I don't know yet. Why?

Eden

저랑 같이 저녁 먹을래요? 제가 요리해요.

jeo-rang ga-chi jeo-nyeok meo-geul-lae-yo? je-ga yo-ri-hae-yo.

Want to have dinner with me? I'll cook.

진짜요? 좋아요! 몇 시에 가요?

jin-jja-yo? jo-a-yo! myeot si-e ga-yo?

Really? Sounds great! What time should I come?

Eden

일곱 시요. 기다릴게요.

il-gop si-yo. gi-da-ril-ge-yo.

Seven o'clock. I'll be waiting.

From Seoli's story: five verbs, zero dictionary forms in sight — that's the point.

Every verb above can slot into a sentence the same way 좋아해요 and 기다릴게요 just did — keep the shape, swap the stem.

The one trap: verbs that only look irregular

Every -batchim verb looks like a candidate for the irregular club, and most learners assume they all are. They're not. 입다 (wear) and 잡다 (catch, hold) keep their no matter what comes next — 입어요, never 이워요. Rough rule of thumb: verbs describing a physical, bodily action, like 눕다 (lie down) or 굽다 (grill), tend to be irregular. Plain, everyday actions like wearing or grabbing tend not to be. It's a guideline, not a law — when in doubt, check.

Frequently asked questions

What are the most common Korean verbs?

가다 (go), 오다 (come), 하다 (do), 먹다 (eat), 보다 (see), 있다 (to be/have/exist) and 되다 (to become) cover an enormous share of everyday spoken Korean. This list's 50 verbs extend that core set with the daily-life, 하다-compound and irregular verbs you'll need within your first few months of speaking.

Do I need to memorize Korean irregular verbs separately?

Not one at a time — memorize the pattern instead. There are really only four stem changes (ㄷ, ㅂ, 르, ㅡ) plus a few named exceptions like 돕다. Learn each pattern with two or three example verbs and you can usually guess a new irregular verb's 해요-form correctly on the first try.

What's the difference between dictionary form and 해요-form?

The dictionary form (ending in 다, like 가다) is how verbs are listed in a dictionary and how grammar rules attach to them — it's never spoken alone. The 해요-form (가요) is the actual polite, everyday conjugation Koreans use in real conversation. You need both: dictionary form for looking things up, 해요-form for talking.

How many Korean verbs do you need for a basic conversation?

Somewhere around 50 to 80 well-chosen verbs, paired with basic particles and a handful of sentence endings, gets you through most everyday situations — ordering food, describing your day, asking simple questions. Depth of use matters more than raw count: 50 verbs across every tense beats 300 known only in dictionary form.

Is 있다 a verb or an adjective in Korean?

Grammatically it behaves like an action verb in some structures (있어요, 있을 거예요) and like a descriptive verb elsewhere — Korean linguistics gives it its own category, separate from both action verbs and adjectives. The practical answer: conjugate it like a regular verb (있어요), and you'll be right every time.