HomeKoreanGlossary › broccoli

Korean vocabulary · Beginner

How do you say "broccoli" in Korean?

브로콜리

beurokolli

Noun Hangul

In Korean, "broccoli" is 브로콜리.

Listen to the pronunciation:

Free Korean learning game. No sign-up, play in browser. See all games

Pronunciation

Pronounced 'buh-roh-kol-lee' with four syllables, stress on first.

Writing and usage

브로콜리 is five syllables, the Korean spelling of the English vegetable name.

Example sentence

브로콜리는 녹색이에요.

Broccoli is green.

Test your Korean knowledge in our free browser games.

How to remember 브로콜리

브로콜리 mirrors the English pronunciation of broccoli.

Related words

Browse all Korean words in the glossary.

See more supermarket words.

See more supermarket words.

See more supermarket words.

Questions about 브로콜리

How do you say "broccoli" in Korean?

In Korean, "broccoli" is 브로콜리. It is a noun.

How is 브로콜리 written in Korean?

브로콜리 is five syllables, the Korean spelling of the English vegetable name.

How is 브로콜리 used in a sentence?

Use 브로콜리 as you would use the equivalent noun in English. For example: 브로콜리는 녹색이에요. (Broccoli is green.).

Where can I practice Korean words for free?

You can play free Korean minigames in your browser on the Noun Town online games page, no sign-up required. Every word in the Korean glossary also has native audio and an example sentence you can revisit any time.

"Broccoli" in other languages

Curated by Jack Ratcliffe

This word is part of the vocabulary taught in the Korean language learning game Noun Town, where words are introduced through play rather than memorisation.

Noun Town language-learning game on PC, Mac and VR
The full experience

Noun Town on PC, Mac & VR

These browser games are just a taste. The full Noun Town is a bigger, deeper 3D world: explore a living town, talk to its characters and learn thousands of words in immersive VR, Mixed Reality, or on your computer. It's an award-winning game with 590+ reviews on Steam and 12 languages to learn.

See the full game ▶

Spot an error? Email us at contact@noun.town