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The Magic Verb Haeyo: How to Turn Any English Word into Korean

해요
haeyo
The verb that does everything ✨

You know that moment when you’re trying to say something in Korean, and your brain just… freezes? 🧊 You know the word in English. You might even know it in Korean. But you have no idea how to turn it into a verb.

What if I told you there’s a cheat code?

🔑 Meet Your New Best Friend

Korean has this beautifully simple verb: 하다 (hada) — it means “to do.” Its polite spoken form is 해요 (haeyo).

Here’s where it gets magical: you can stick 해요 onto the end of tons of words — Korean nouns, English loan words, you name it — and boom, you have a perfectly valid Korean verb. 🎯

📦 Noun + 해요 = Verb
운동 (undong) 운동해요 = I exercise / I work out
공부 (gongbu) 공부해요 = I study

That’s it. You just built a Korean sentence. 🎉

📋 Everyday Examples

Look how many verbs you can make with this one trick:

🇰🇷 Word 🔤 Sound 🇬🇧 Meaning ✨ As a Verb
요리 yori cooking 요리해요 — I cook 🍳
청소 cheongso cleaning 청소해요 — I clean 🧹
쇼핑 syoping shopping 쇼핑해요 — I shop 🛍️
운전 unjeon driving 운전해요 — I drive 🚗
사랑 sarang love 사랑해요 — I love ❤️
다이어트 daieoteu diet 다이어트해요 — I diet 🥗
노래 norae singing 노래해요 — I sing 🎵
여행 yeohaeng travel 여행해요 — I travel ✈️
캠핑 kaemping camping 캠핑해요 — I camp ⛺
검색 geomsaek search 검색해요 — I search 🔍

See what happened? Some are pure Korean words (사랑, 청소). Some are borrowed from English (쇼핑, 다이어트, 캠핑). It doesn’t matter. The pattern works the same way. 💪

Teacher Seoul Tip: If you hear a word in Korean that sounds suspiciously like English — 쇼핑, 스트레칭 (stretching), 캠핑 (camping) — there’s a very good chance you can just add 해요 and you’ve got yourself a verb. Try it. You’ll be right more often than you’d expect!

📖 The Classroom Story

I’ll never forget the day this clicked for one of my students.

We were going through daily routines — what do you do in the morning, what do you do after work — and she kept getting stuck. Every time she wanted to say a new verb, she’d pause, look at me, and ask: “How do I say that in Korean?”

So I wrote 해요 on the board. Big. With a smiley face next to it. 😊

🧑‍🏫 Teacher Seoul: “What did you do this weekend?”

🙋 Student: “Umm… shopping?”

🧑‍🏫 Teacher Seoul: “How do Koreans say shopping?”

🙋 Student: “쇼핑?”

🧑‍🏫 Teacher Seoul: “Now add 해요.”

🙋 Student: “쇼핑… 해요?”

🧑‍🏫 Teacher Seoul: “You just said ‘I went shopping’ in Korean.”

She stared at me. Then at the board. Then back at me.

“Wait… that’s it?!” 😱

After that, she went on a rampage. 요리해요! 운동해요! 다이어트해요! She was building Korean verbs faster than I could keep up. That “why didn’t anyone tell me this sooner” face — honestly makes teaching worth it. 😄

⚠️ When It Doesn’t Work

Let’s be honest — this isn’t a magic spell that works 100% of the time.

Not every noun works with 하다. You can’t say 물해요 (“I water”? 🤔) or 집해요 (“I house”? 🏠). The nouns that work are action nouns — words that describe an activity.

Some verbs have their own form: “to eat” is 먹어요 (meogeoyo), not 음식해요. “To go” is 가요 (gayo). These you just have to learn the old-fashioned way. 📚

Quick rule of thumb: If the noun describes an activity (studying, cooking, exercising) → 해요 works ✅ If it describes a thing (water, house, cat) → it won’t ❌

🎯 Practice Time!

1. You exercise every morning. Exercise = 운동 (undong). Make it a verb!

Show Answer

운동해요 (undong-haeyo)! Easy, right?

2. You went camping last weekend. Camping = 캠핑 (kaemping). How do you say it?

Show Answer

캠핑해요 (kaemping-haeyo)! For past tense you’d say 캠핑했어요 (kaemping-haesseoyo) — but that’s a lesson for another day 😉

3. Tell someone “I love you” in Korean. Love = 사랑 (sarang). Go!

Show Answer

❤️ 사랑해요 (sarang-haeyo)! Yes — that famous K-drama phrase. Now you know how it’s built!

🚀 Go Make Some Verbs!

Here’s what I want you to take away: you already know more Korean verbs than you think. Every action noun you learn is automatically a verb waiting to happen. Just add 해요. ✨

Next time you’re stuck mid-sentence, don’t panic. Think of the noun. Slap 해요 on the end. Chances are, you just said something perfectly understandable.

And if a Korean person smiles at you when you do it? That’s not them laughing at you. That’s them being genuinely impressed. 🇰🇷

You’ve got this. 화이팅! 💪

— Teacher Seoul