Review Objectives
- Recall all 15 greetings without prompts — meaning and context both
- Produce self-introduction vocabulary from English cues alone
- Match 10 polite expressions to the real-world situation they belong to
- Convert 12 numbers between digits and Sino-Korean instantly
- Deliver a full self-introduction from memory — no notes, no template
15 phrases — say the meaning before flipping
Each card shows a Korean phrase. Say its English meaning aloud, then flip to confirm. Any card that takes more than 3 seconds goes into tonight's drill pile.
👆 Say the meaning — then tap to check
English → Korean
Each card gives the English meaning. Think of the Korean word and say it aloud before tapping to reveal.
👆 Say the Korean — then tap to check
Situation → the right phrase
Read the situation. Think of the best expression from Lesson 13 before tapping to reveal.
👆 Think of the phrase first — then tap
Digits → Korean — say it before tapping
Each card shows a number. Say the complete Korean aloud — both the tens and units — before tapping to confirm.
👆 Say it aloud — then tap to check
Five lines from memory — then reveal one by one
Say the complete self-introduction from Lesson 12 using your real details — no notes, no template. When you're done, tap each line to check the structure.
👆 Say each line aloud — then tap to check the Korean
How did Week 3 land?
Count your correct responses across all five parts. A hesitation over 3 seconds counts as a miss. Be honest — this score is only useful if it's accurate.
Your Week 3 Score
— out of 52 itemsTap your result above to see your Week 4 recommendation.
세 주 완료 — Three Weeks Done
세 주 (three weeks) of Korean is behind you. Think about what that actually means: you can read every written Korean word, you understand how pronunciation shifts in natural speech, and you have 60 active words covering the most essential social situations in the language. You can introduce yourself, make requests, handle confusion gracefully, and count to 100.
Week 4 moves into grammar — the topic particle 은/는, the subject particle 이/가, how to say there is and there isn't (있어요/없어요), and the calendar vocabulary for days and months. This is where the language stops being isolated words and starts becoming a system. The patterns you learn in Week 4 will appear in nearly every Korean sentence you ever produce. It's a good week to be arriving at.
📚 Lesson 15 Homework
Heading into Week 4…
Write your full self-introduction from scratch — no template, no notes, five lines. Time yourself. Aim for under 45 seconds spoken naturally. If any line stalls, that's your drill target tonight.
Count from 1 to 100 in Sino-Korean straight through — aloud, no pausing. Do it while doing something else (walking, making tea) to build automaticity rather than effortful recall.
Pull any cards from today that took over 3 seconds. Give them a targeted 10-minute drill session — both directions, Korean → English and English → Korean.
Say today's date in Korean: [month]월 [day]일. Do this every morning — it costs 5 seconds and locks in both calendar vocabulary and numbers simultaneously over time.
Week 4 preview — Lessons 16–20: Native Korean numbers + counters (L16) · days, months and the calendar (L17) · grammar: 은/는 and 이에요/예요 (L18) · grammar: 이/가 있어요/없어요 (L19) · Month 1 full review (L20). The language starts connecting into real sentences. 가겠습니다!