Colors in Korean
Korean colors work differently from European languages because they are based on descriptive verbs rather than simple adjectives. Each color has a base verb form, a modifying adjective form, and a noun form with 색 (saek, meaning "color"). Understanding these three forms is the key to using Korean colors naturally in conversation.
Primary Colors: Noun and Adjective Forms
Each color below is shown in its 색 (noun) form and its adjective form. The adjective form is what you use to describe nouns directly.
The adjective forms (빨간, 파란, 노란, etc.) go directly before nouns: 빨간 사과 (ppalgan sagwa, red apple), 파란 하늘 (paran haneul, blue sky). The 색 forms are used when talking about the color itself: 빨간색이 좋아요 (I like red).
Secondary and Additional Colors
These colors round out your vocabulary for everyday descriptions. Some are native Korean words, while others are borrowed from English.
The Descriptive Verb Base Forms
In Korean, colors are fundamentally descriptive verbs. The dictionary (base) form is useful to know because it is what you will find in dictionaries, and all other forms derive from it.
These ㅎ-irregular verbs undergo a special conjugation where the ㅎ drops when followed by certain endings. The modifying form replaces ㅎ다 with ㄴ: 빨갛다 → 빨간 (red), 파랗다 → 파란 (blue). This is a predictable pattern once you learn it.
Colors in Everyday Sentences
Here is how colors appear in natural Korean sentences:
- 이 빨간 가방 얼마예요? (i ppalgan gabang eolmayeyo?) — How much is this red bag?
- 파란색으로 주세요. (paransaegeuro juseyo.) — Give me the blue one, please.
- 노란 꽃이 예뻐요. (noran kkochi yeppeoyo.) — The yellow flowers are pretty.
- 까만 머리가 좋아요. (kkaman meoriga joayo.) — I like black hair.
Light and Dark Variations
To describe shades, Korean uses the modifiers 밝은 (balgeun, bright/light) and 어두운 (eoduun, dark), or the more color-specific 진한 (jinhan, deep/dark) and 연한 (yeonhan, light/soft):
- 연한 파란색 (yeonhan paransaek) — Light blue
- 진한 빨간색 (jinhan ppalgansaek) — Deep/dark red
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between 색 colors and adjective colors in Korean?
Korean color words ending in 색 (saek) are nouns meaning "X-colored" (빨간색 = red color). The adjective forms (빨간, 파란, etc.) are used to directly describe nouns: 빨간 사과 (ppalgan sagwa, red apple). The 색 forms are used when talking about the color itself: 빨간색이 좋아요 (ppalgansaegi joayo, I like the color red).
Do Korean colors change form like in French or Spanish?
Korean colors do not change for gender or number since Korean has no grammatical gender and does not mark plural in most cases. However, Korean color adjectives do conjugate like other adjectives based on formality and tense. For example, 빨갛다 (ppalgata, to be red) conjugates to 빨간 (ppalgan) when modifying a noun and 빨개요 (ppalgaeyo) in polite speech.
What are the most important colors to learn first in Korean?
Start with the six most common: 빨간색 (red), 파란색 (blue), 노란색 (yellow), 하얀색 (white), 까만색 (black), and 초록색 (green). These cover most daily situations like describing objects, clothes, and giving directions.
Why do some Korean colors have two forms like 하얗다 and 희다?
Korean has descriptive verb pairs for some colors. 하얗다 (hayata) means bright/pure white while 희다 (huida) is a simpler, more literary word for white. In everyday speech, 하얗다 and its forms (하얀, 하얀색) are far more common.