-을래

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See also: -을래-

Korean[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

  • ㄹ래 (-llae)after vowel or (l)-final stems

Etymology[edit]

Short for 을라 (-eulla hae), nonstandard form of Standard Korean 으려 "[one] tries to do; [one] plans to do". The first element is from Middle Korean 오〮리〮라〮 (-wólílá), and the second is simply the infinitive of 하다 (hada).[1]

Pronunciation[edit]

Romanizations
Revised Romanization?eullae
Revised Romanization (translit.)?eullae
McCune–Reischauer?ŭllae
Yale Romanization?ullay

Suffix[edit]

을래 (-eullae)

  1. In the intimate speech level, or with (-yo) in the polite speech level, a desiderative suffix marking the subject's intention about the future:
    1. Used to declare the intention of the speaker.
      이제 그만할래.Ije geumanhallae.I'm gonna quit. / That’s enough.
      저녁 을래.Jeonyeok an meogeullae-yo.I'm not going to have dinner.
    2. Used to ask about the intention of the listener.
      라면 먹고 갈래?Ramyeon meokgo gallae?Do you want to Netflix and chill? (literally, “Do you want to have ramen at my place?”)
    3. Used to give a very polite request.
      문제 풀어볼래? (by a tutor to a student)I munje pureo-bollae?Do you want to try solving this problem?

Usage notes[edit]

  • 을래 (-eullae) causes stem-final (l) to drop out.
  • In some dialects, this appears as a general future-tense marker that must obligatorily take other suffixes after it; see the entry at 을래 (-eullae-).

References[edit]

  1. ^ 신현규 [sinhyeon'gyu] (2022) “'려고/ㄹ라고'와 ‘{ᄒᆞ/야}X’의 융합 분석”, in 어문논총, volume 40, pages 101-136