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Korean Grammar, Untangled · № 15

Korean Counters: 개, 명, 마리 and the Seven Worth Learning

6 min read

Korean pairs every number with a counter word chosen by category: 개 for objects, 명 for people, 마리 for animals, plus a handful of others for cups, bottles, books, and flat things. The number also changes shape before the counter — 하나 becomes 한, 둘 becomes 두. Learn seven counters well and you can count almost anything a normal day throws at you.

Search "Korean counters" and you'll land on lists with 80, sometimes 100+ entries — counters for cigarettes, sheets of hanji, pairs of chopsticks, boats. Nobody keeps all of that in working memory, including native speakers, who quietly default to for anything obscure. Seven counters carry almost every sentence you'll actually say out loud. Learn those cold and treat the rest as reference material you'll pick up by exposure, not flashcards.

How the system actually works

In English, the number does all the work: "two apples," "two people," "two dogs" — same word, different noun. Korean makes the counter do that work instead. The number tells you the quantity; the counter tells you what kind of thing you're counting. And the order flips from English: noun, then number, then counter — never number before noun.

사과 두 개

sa-gwa du gae

two apples

개 = generic object counter

학생 두 명

hak-saeng du myeong

two students

명 = people counter

강아지 두 마리

gang-a-ji du ma-ri

two puppies

마리 = animal counter

Same quantity, same number word (두), three completely different counters. The category — not the number — decides which counter you reach for.

That's the whole system: pick the counter that matches the category, put number + counter after the noun, done. The hard part was never the grammar. It's memorizing which counter goes with which category, and that's exactly what a Korean numbers foundation makes faster, since you're not also relearning how to count while you learn this.

The priority list: seven counters that cover 90% of real life

This is the un-guilty shortcut. Master these seven, in roughly this order of how often you'll need them, and stop worrying about the rest until context forces you to learn one.

CounterUsed forExample
개 (gae)Objects, food items, anything ungendered and uncategorized사과 세 개 (sa-gwa se gae) — three apples
명 (myeong)People, casual/neutral register친구 두 명 (chin-gu du myeong) — two friends
마리 (ma-ri)Animals — pets, livestock, anything alive and not human고양이 한 마리 (go-yang-i han ma-ri) — one cat
잔 (jan)Cups or glasses of a drink커피 두 잔 (keo-pi du jan) — two coffees
병 (byeong)Bottles맥주 세 병 (maek-ju se byeong) — three beers
권 (gwon)Books, notebooks, bound volumes책 네 권 (chaek ne gwon) — four books
장 (jang)Flat things — paper, tickets, photos, tickets stubs티켓 두 장 (ti-ket du jang) — two tickets

Notice what's missing on purpose: no counter for chairs, no counter for shoes, no counter for cigarettes. You will eventually absorb 벌 (clothing sets) or 켤레 (pairs of shoes) from context, the same way you learned "a school of fish" in English without a vocab list. Front-loading all 100 now just delays the seven that matter.

Native numbers shrink before counters

Notice 두, not 둘, in every example above. Korean's native number system (하나, 둘, 셋…) shortens its first four numbers, plus twenty, when they sit directly in front of a counter. Everything from five up stays exactly as it is.

Counting numberForm before a counter
하나 (1)
둘 (2)
셋 (3)
넷 (4)
스물 (20)스무
다섯 (5) and upno change — 다섯, 여섯, 일곱… stay full-length

This is why age is famously a trap: "twenty years old" is 스무 살, not 스물 살 — one of the first irregular forms every learner mangles. And because these are the native Korean numbers, they only go up to 99; past that, counting switches to the Sino-Korean set entirely, which never shortens.

Watch the mistake happen, live

The single most common counter error isn't picking the wrong counter — it's forgetting the number has to shrink first. Sino-Korean 사 (four) leaking into a native-number slot is so common that staff at restaurants barely blink at it anymore.

Staff

몇 분이세요?

myeot bun-i-se-yo?

How many of you? (polite)

어, 사... 아니, 네 명이요!

eo, sa... a-ni, ne myeong-i-yo!

Uh, four... wait, four people!

Staff

네, 네 분 이쪽으로 안내해드릴게요.

ne, ne bun i-jjok-eu-ro an-nae-hae-deu-ril-ge-yo.

Great, this way for the four of you.

Jihoon

거봐, 사 명이 아니라니까.

geo-bwa, sa myeong-i a-ni-ra-ni-kka.

Told you it's not '사 명.'

The self-correction is realistic — even fluent learners catch themselves reaching for before their mouth remembers 네. And notice the staff upgraded to the honorific automatically; more on that below.

The escape hatch, and the honorific swap

The one counter swap worth knowing on purpose is 분. 분 is the honorific version of the people counter — same job, higher register. Restaurant and shop staff use it for customers by default (몇 분이세요? not 몇 명이세요?), and you should reach for it with elders, guests, or anyone you'd address with jondaetmal generally.

One more honest complication: a handful of everyday counters pair with Sino-Korean numbers instead of the native ones covered here — 번 (times: 세 번, "three times"), 층 (floors: 삼 층, "3rd floor"), as minutes rather than the honorific person counter (오 분, "5 minutes"). There's no rule that predicts which system a given counter uses. You learn each one as a fixed phrase, the same way you learned that English says "a herd" of cattle but "a flock" of birds — through repetition inside real sentences, which is most of what ordering food in Korean actually trains.

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between and for counting people?

is the neutral, everyday counter for people — 친구 두 명 ("two friends"). is its honorific twin, used for elders, guests, or customers: 손님 세 분 ("three customers"). Swap for whenever the situation calls for polite speech; shop and restaurant staff use automatically.

Do I always need a counter after a number in Korean?

In careful speech, yes — dropping it sounds unfinished. In fast, casual speech Koreans do drop it sometimes, especially ordering ("아메리카노 둘이요" instead of "아메리카노 두 잔이요"). Learn with the counter attached until it's automatic; you can economize later once the instinct is solid.

Is it ever okay to use for people?

No — is strictly for objects, and using it for people (사람 두 개) sounds dehumanizing, not just grammatically off. Native speakers notice immediately. Use in casual contexts, in polite ones, and save as your fallback for literally everything that isn't alive.

Why does 사과 두 개 put the number after the noun?

Korean counter phrases follow noun → number → counter, the reverse of English's number-first order. Think of it as naming the thing before quantifying it: "apple, two of them" rather than "two apples." This order is fixed — the number-counter pair never moves in front of the noun.

How is counting time and money different from this system?

Hours use native numbers with 시 (한 시, "1 o'clock"), but minutes switch to Sino-Korean numbers with 분 (십오 분, "15 minutes") — a split-system clock that trips up nearly every learner at least once. Money almost always runs on Sino-Korean numbers too, as in 오천 원 ("5,000 won").