Korean Word Order: Multiple Particles Stack
Korean stacks particles: 에서(at) + 만(only). English uses separate words in different positions.
The Rule
Structure: Noun + Particle + Particle Korean stacks particles: 에서(at) + 만(only). English uses separate words in different positions. Korean word order is fundamentally different from English. While English uses Subject-Verb-Object (SVO), Korean uses Subject-Object-Verb (SOV). This means the VERB always comes last — and everything else rearranges around that principle.
Why English Speakers Get It Wrong
English speakers instinctively put the verb after the subject: "I EAT rice." In Korean, you must wait: "I rice EAT" (나는 밥을 먹어요). This feels backwards at first. The good news: Korean word order is actually MORE flexible than English for everything EXCEPT the verb. You can scramble the other elements and still be understood, because particles (은/는, 이/가, 을/를) mark each word's role. The verb just has to come last.
How It Works
English: "I eat only at school." Korean: "학교에서만 먹어요." (hakgyoeseoman meokeoyo.) Structure: Noun + Particle + Particle Korean stacks particles: 에서(at) + 만(only). English uses separate words in different positions. Break down the Korean sentence and notice how each piece maps to the English meaning. The order is different, but the meaning is clear thanks to particles and verb-final position.
Real Examples
• 학교에서만 먹어요. (hakgyoeseoman meokeoyo.) — "I eat only at school." Structure: Noun + Particle + Particle Word-by-word breakdown: 학교에서만 (hakgyoeseoman) 먹어요 (meokeoyo)
Common Mistakes
❌ Putting the verb in the middle (English order) ✅ Verb always comes LAST: 학교에서만 먹어요. → In Korean, no matter how complex the sentence, the main verb sits at the end. ❌ Translating word-by-word from English ✅ Learn the Korean structure pattern: Noun + Particle + Particle → Instead of translating, practice thinking in Korean patterns. Say the structure out loud before forming the sentence.
Quick Tip
When constructing a Korean sentence, start by identifying the VERB and put it at the end. Then fill in the rest using the pattern: Noun + Particle + Particle. A helpful exercise: take simple English sentences and rearrange them to end with the verb. "I love you" → "I you love" → "나는 너를 사랑해." This builds the SOV habit.
Noun + Particle + Particle
Examples
학교에서만 먹어요. — hakgyoeseoman meokeoyo. — I eat only at school.