How to say "stop raining" in Korean?

In Korean "stop raining" translates to  비가 그치다 

Transliteration: biga geuchida

🇰🇷 비가 그쳤으니까 나갈 수 있어요.

🗣️ biga geuchyeosseunikka nagal su isseoyo.

🇺🇸 Since it stopped raining, I can go out now.



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🇰🇷

Korean

Native speakers
77M 🗣️
Official language in
2 countries 🌍
Active vocabulary
10k-20k 📚
Difficulty
medium-hard 🤔
Closest langauges
None among major
⏳ Avg. time to basics
900-1100 hours ⏳

Why learn Korean?

Learning Korean provides a gateway into a culture experiencing a global surge through K-pop, Korean cinema, and skincare. South Korea is also an emerging powerhouse in technology and automotive sectors. For basic fluency, English speakers need around 1,500-2,000 vocabulary words and should anticipate 900-1,100 hours for general proficiency due to the unique alphabet and grammar. Key elements include mastering Hangul—the phonetic script—and understanding sentence-endings that convey formality. While the structure is different from English, subject-object-verb order and honorifics offer a fascinating layer of cultural respect in communication. Mastery not only enhances career prospects but also deepens engagement with a culture that's captivating the world.



Frequently Asked Questions

How to say "stop raining" in Korean?

You can use the word "비가 그치다" which translates to "stop raining".

How to pronounce "비가 그치다" (stop raining) in Korean?

The word "비가 그치다" is pronounced as "biga geuchida".

Do you have an audio recording on how to pronounce" 비가 그치다" (stop raining) in Korean?

Not yet, but this functionality is coming soon. We're focusing on the quality of the written content first.