Postby javiskefka » March 6th, 2008 10:45 pm
Since English is my native language, sometimes I carry my comma habits into Korean writing, like putting a comma where I would pause naturally in a sentence, or in a list. I like to think that I don't carry them all though. You definitely don't need a comma after a coordinating conjunction in Korean, because the conjunction itself suffices. They really help in long lists, though. Single quotation marks are used in the news these days to mark unusual words used by other people, like the "air quotes" that we make with two fingers on each hand in America. Double quotation marks are used to separate direct quotes from the rest of the sentence.
You don't really need any punctuation in Korean, though. Even a full stop or a quotation mark is implied by the sentence ending.