Why 있는 Sounds Like [인는]: 자음동화 Explained
Consonant Assimilation (자음동화) changes how 있는 is actually pronounced.
The Written Form vs. Actual Sound
있는 is written with the characters you see, but Koreans actually say [인는]. This isn't sloppy speech — it's a systematic sound rule called 자음동화 (Consonant Assimilation). If you read Korean letter-by-letter, you'll pronounce 있는 as "itneun". But the actual pronunciation is [인는] ("inneun"). This gap between spelling and pronunciation is one of the trickiest parts of Korean for learners.
Why English Speakers Get It Wrong
English has sound changes too (think "don't you" → "doncha"), but they're optional and informal. Korean sound changes are MANDATORY — every native speaker applies them automatically, and NOT applying them marks you as a beginner. The challenge is that Korean is written phonemically (how it's structured) not phonetically (how it sounds). Once you learn the rules, you can predict the actual pronunciation of any word — even ones you've never seen before.
How It Works
ㅆ → ㄷ → ㄴ before ㄴ → [인는]. Two-step change. The 자음동화 rule: ㄱ before ㅁ becomes ㅇ (nasalization subtype) → [궁물]. This rule applies consistently across Korean. Once you internalize it, you'll automatically hear and produce the correct pronunciation. Listen to native audio and compare the written form with what you actually hear.
Real Examples
• 있는 → [인는] (inneun) — "existing" Written: itneun → Spoken: inneun • 국물 → [궁물] (gungmur) — "broth/soup stock" Written: gukmur → Spoken: gungmur • 받는 → [반는] (banneun) — "receiving" Written: batneun → Spoken: banneun • 꽃밭 → [꼳빧→꼬빧] (kkotppat→kkoppat) — "flower garden" Written: kkotbat → Spoken: kkotppat→kkoppat
Common Mistakes
❌ Reading 있는 as "itneun" (letter-by-letter) ✅ Saying [인는] as "inneun" (with 자음동화 applied) → Apply 자음동화 to get the natural pronunciation. Reading each character separately gives the wrong sound. ❌ Thinking the pronunciation change is optional ✅ 자음동화 is mandatory in standard Korean → Unlike English casual contractions, Korean sound changes aren't optional — they're part of correct pronunciation.
Quick Tip
Listen to native speakers and focus on how syllable boundaries shift. Practice saying [인는] out loud 10 times. Then try reading 있는 and automatically applying the 자음동화 rule. A useful drill: cover the pronunciation, look at the written form, predict the actual sound, then check. This builds the mental habit of automatic sound change application.
자음동화: 있는 → [인는]
Examples
있는 — itneun — existing
[인는] — inneun — existing
국물 — gukmur — broth/soup stock
받는 — batneun — receiving
꽃밭 — kkotbat — flower garden