@shortstories Watch out I found out today that they changed korean course few days ago.
I thought i was retard and accidently skipped section when I got from simple things to complex sentences and words that were not in the course where I learned child, ant, fox, key, newspaper and student.
Found out later on reddit that they made changes to the course
Korean course changed
https://www.reddit.com/r/duolingo/comments/1k86uo1/korean_course_changed/
What is up with the Korean course?
https://www.reddit.com/r/duolingo/comments/1jq4f96/what_is_up_with_the_korean_course/
👿 🧐 🤔 🤬
@shortstories Probably will reset the course and will start over because now it is so fucking confusing for me.
And some people say they changed chinese too but I did one yesterday and it looked normal to me.
I believe that the closest they do to deal with the location of an object relative to the speaker or listener was to use the word was "this" or "that" or "my" or "yours" but they did not include a third option like "over there"
Also the Korean course had a problem with anything involving the definite article "the" and the indefinite articles "a" or "an" none of which exist in Korean. There is also no "he" vs "she" or "her" vs "him" in Korean because Korean pronouns have no gender.
I am the closest to completing Haitian Kreyol Kreole I just hope they did not change the whole thing, I am no where near close to conpleting the other languages except Navajo which I finished multiple times. I am also learning Korean as a Chinese speaker and reseting that would be a nuissance because the lessons usually take longer than Korean or Chinese lessons in English
Some people reset languages after completing them to do them again so at least you will get more practice
@Stahesh
The other thing is Duolingo beginner level Korean for English speakers had everything super formal polite like you were talking to a stranger that is older than you in a higher position of authority or social status than you. But if you learned English as a Korean speaker they made the Korean super informal like a parent talking to their child.