Korean Batchim: Batchim and Verb Conjugation

Whether a verb stem ends in batchim determines conjugation patterns. Consonant-ending stems (먹-) and vowel-ending stems (가-) follow different rules.

The Rule

Whether a verb stem ends in batchim determines conjugation patterns. Consonant-ending stems (먹-) and vowel-ending stems (가-) follow different rules. Batchim (받침) literally means "support" — it's the consonant at the bottom of a Korean syllable block. Understanding batchim is essential because it affects pronunciation, particle selection, and sound changes between syllables.

Why English Speakers Get It Wrong

English final consonants are always pronounced as-is: "cat" ends with a clear /t/, "dog" with /g/. Korean is different — many final consonants CHANGE their sound in batchim position. The surprise: Korean has 27 possible batchim but only 7 actual sounds. This means multiple consonants can sound identical at the end of a syllable. If you pronounce every batchim letter as written, Koreans may not understand you.

How It Works

Whether a verb stem ends in batchim determines conjugation patterns. Consonant-ending stems (먹-) and vowel-ending stems (가-) follow different rules. This rule applies automatically in standard Korean pronunciation. Native speakers don't think about it — it's completely natural to them.

Real Examples

• 먹 + 어요 → 먹어요 [머거요] (meok + eoyo) — "eat (liaison)" Consonant stem + 어요 • 가 + 아요 → 가요 (ga + ayo) — "go (contraction)" Vowel stem: 아 merges • 읽 + 으면 → 읽으면 [일그면] (ir + eumyeon) — "if (one) reads" Double batchim + 으 buffer

Common Mistakes

❌ Pronouncing every batchim consonant as its dictionary sound ✅ Apply the reduction rules: many consonants merge into the 7 representative sounds → Consonant stem + 어요 ❌ Ignoring batchim when choosing particles (은/는, 이/가, 을/를) ✅ Always check if the noun ends with batchim before selecting the particle form → Whether a noun has batchim determines which particle variant to use. This is a practical skill you'll need in every Korean sentence.

Quick Tip

Focus on the 7 representative sounds first: [ㄱ], [ㄴ], [ㄷ], [ㄹ], [ㅁ], [ㅂ], [ㅇ]. Once you know which group each consonant belongs to, pronunciation becomes predictable. Practice tip: take any Korean text and mark the batchim in each syllable. Then predict the actual pronunciation before listening to native audio. This exercise builds the habit of reading Korean "as spoken" not "as written."

Batchim and Verb Conjugation: Consonant stem + 어요

Examples

먹 + 어요 → 먹어요 [머거요] — meok + eoyo — eat (liaison)

가 + 아요 → 가요 — ga + ayo — go (contraction)

읽 + 으면 → 읽으면 [일그면] — ir + eumyeon — if (one) reads