헤타페와 지로나는 어디에서 축구를 합니까?
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정답: A. 경기장
How to solve: The question asks 'Where do Getafe and Girona play football?'. A football match is played in a 'stadium'. The Korean word for stadium is '경기장'.
Choice analysis (EN):
A — '경기장' means 'stadium', which is the correct venue for a professional football match.
B — '학교' means 'school'. While people can play football at school, it's not the venue for a professional match like this.
C — '병원' means 'hospital'. A hospital is a place for sick people.
D — '공원' means 'park'. A park is a place for recreation, but not for official matches.
축구 선수들은 공을 발로 ____.
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정답: B. 찹니다
How to solve: The sentence says 'Football players ____ the ball with their feet.' The verb that fits this action is 'kick'. The Korean word for 'to kick' is '차다', which conjugates to '찹니다'.
Choice analysis (EN):
A — '먹습니다' means 'eat'.
B — '찹니다' means 'kick'. This is the correct action in football.
C — '읽습니다' means 'read'.
D — '마십니다' means 'drink'.
헤타페와 지로나, 모두 ____ 팀이 경기를 합니다.
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정답: B. 두
How to solve: The question is 'Getafe and Girona, a total of ____ teams are playing.' Getafe is one team and Girona is another. Therefore, there are two teams. The Korean word for 'two' (when counting items) is '두'.
Choice analysis (EN):
A — '한' means 'one'. There are more than one team.
B — '두' means 'two'. This is the correct number of teams.
C — '세' means 'three'.
D — '네' means 'four'.
경기를 이긴 팀은 기분이 ____.
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정답: C. 좋습니다
How to solve: The sentence means 'The team that won the game feels ____.' A winning team usually feels happy or good. The Korean word for 'good' is '좋다', which conjugates to '좋습니다'.
Choice analysis (EN):
A — '슬픕니다' means 'is sad'.
B — '아픕니다' means 'is sick' or 'hurts'.
C — '좋습니다' means 'is good' or 'feels good'. This is the correct emotion for winning.
D — '피곤합니다' means 'is tired'. While players might be tired, the primary emotion of winning is happiness.
팬들은 자기가 좋아하는 팀을 ____.
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정답: A. 응원합니다
How to solve: The sentence means 'Fans ____ the team they like.' The action that fans do for their team is 'cheering'. The Korean word for 'to cheer' is '응원하다', which conjugates to '응원합니다'.
Choice analysis (EN):
A — '응원합니다' means 'cheer for'. This is what fans do.
B — '공부합니다' means 'study'.
C — '청소합니다' means 'clean'.
D — '요리합니다' means 'cook'.
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