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| owl10 |
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 owl10 Could Be A Chat Bot

Joined: 09 Apr 2010 Karma :  
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 Posted: 21:01 - 27 Sep 2012 Post subject: Tell me about......... South Korea |
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Hi everyone,
As you may have seen Ive alluded to in another thread Im off to 'nice korea' for the best part of 11 weeks. Im leaving next monday and back just before xmas.
Im going to the far south, a place called Sacheon which is just south of Jinju.
Never been to the 'far east' before so no idea what to expect. I dont speak the lingo but will be working with Korean staff who speak fluent English, as well as some other western (French...) staff also.
I may have access to a car, or be very tempted to hire a bike.
So, I know a few of you have been traveling, or even lived (or still do) in this part of the world so any tips on anything from business and personal etiquette to what to see and do on my days off would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers!  ____________________ DanceLikeAMonkey says: "An infinte amount of web pages available
Yet I still end up reading crap like that" |
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| The Artist |
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 The Artist Super Spammer

Joined: 06 Jan 2008 Karma :  
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 Posted: 21:08 - 27 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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| Rogerborg |
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 Rogerborg nimbA

Joined: 26 Oct 2010 Karma :    
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 Posted: 22:00 - 27 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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Kimchi is a form of gastric torture. Pringles may be your only hope.
Politics ranges all the way from "Fuck Japan completely" to "Fuck Japan utterly".
Work culture is ostentatiously hard, not smart. Death is preferable to being out-competed. Particularly by the Japanese.
Socialising means drinking yourself to death with a minor sideline in playing yourself to death (clicky, not wanky).
I'd rather eat a jumbo sized bag of dicks than spend more than a week or so in Korea again. Tastes better than kimchi. ____________________ Biking is 1/20th as dangerous as horse riding.
GONE: HN125-8, LF-250B, GPz 305, GPZ 500S, Burgman 400 // RIDING: F650GS (800 twin), Royal Enfield Bullet Electra 500 AVL, Ninja 250R because racebike |
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| Polarbear |
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 Polarbear Super Spammer

Joined: 24 Feb 2007 Karma :  
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 Posted: 22:40 - 27 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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It's a grey country. Grey hi rise buildings in grey streets with people wearing grey.
I found it one of the most depressing countries I have visited or worked in.
Perfectly safe just .......grey  ____________________ Triumph Trophy Launch Edition |
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| Zen Dog |
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 Zen Dog World Chat Champion

Joined: 11 Aug 2004 Karma :    
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 Posted: 23:01 - 27 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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Wow. The places I went to in Asia were NOT like that!
Zen Dog ____________________ Current - '94 VFR750FR (Dead), '00 VFR800FI, '11 600 Hornet - Previous - '11 CBF125, '10 Street Triple R, '92 MZ ETZ301, '05 TTR250, NSR125R, KMX125, "Honda" Win
My bike trip around S.E. Asia 2010/2011 |
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| Ariel Badger |
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 Ariel Badger Super Spammer

Joined: 02 Dec 2006 Karma :     
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 Posted: 23:08 - 27 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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Kimchi rocks and Korean chicks are uber fit.  ____________________ Bikers make great organ donors, get 115 on your licence today. |
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| Polarbear |
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 Polarbear Super Spammer

Joined: 24 Feb 2007 Karma :  
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 Posted: 23:10 - 27 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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I have to say I much prefer Japanese chicks  ____________________ Triumph Trophy Launch Edition |
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| Paddy Blake |
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 Paddy Blake World Chat Champion
Joined: 29 Jun 2006 Karma :   
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 Posted: 00:53 - 28 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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All I know about south Korea is that some years ago my son went out with a lovely girl from there for a good while.
She is still very ambitious.
If you meet a girl from Asia do not add her to friend on facebook where all your friends will hit on her.  |
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| Kradmelder |
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 Kradmelder World Chat Champion

Joined: 13 Jun 2012 Karma :     
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| mistergixer |
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 mistergixer World Chat Champion

Joined: 15 Jun 2005 Karma :   
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 Posted: 15:42 - 28 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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As BCF's resident #1 Koreaphile, I should perhaps step in here and add my two penneth worth:
It has been a while since I visted Korea (1999, stayed for several months), and no doubt things will have changed (the Romanisation standard certainly has) but.....
Food:
Korean food is typically quite spicy - garlic, ginger and chilli are standard ingredients in pretty much every dish. Most meals are accompanied by 3 key things: rice, soup, kimchi (fermented cabbage). Top dishes to try would have to be:
1) bibimbap (dolsot style is best - a heated earthenware bowl filled with rice, meat and mixed vegetables, topped with a runny fried egg. Add hot pepper paste to taste, then mix it all up in the bowl and eat with a spoon. The hot bowl finishes off the egg. Fucking lovely.)
2) Bulgogi - or 'fire beef', marinated beef, usually cooked at the table, wrap it up in a large lettuce leaf and eat.
3) Kalbetang - spicy pork ribs.
4) Chigae - hot pots. Halfway between a soup and a stew, usually containing meat or seafood, tofu and kimchi. Typically quite spicy, very warming and delicious.
5) Kimbap - Korean take on sushi maki-type rolls.
If you're adventurous, try live octopus and (of course) dog. Western food is now very prevalent so you do have a 'safety net' if you don't like 'foreign' food, but personally I never touched it, you can go to Maccie D's at home.....
People and culture:
Koreans are typically polite and couteous. A lot of their culture stems from Confucian ideals, so manners are important.
However, once you get to know them, they are very warm and friendly.
There is a strange distinction between people you know, and people you don't know - if you haven't been formally introduced, you really don't exist. So, don't be surprised if people push in front of you in queues, and DO expect people to bump into you in the street and not apologise. They will not be surprised if you bump into them and say nothing. Took me a while to get my head around this facet of Korean life.
'Going Dutch' is not common, either you pay or your friends pay, you don't normally do rounds of drinks or split restaurant bills.
They do love a drink - Korean beer is nice, Makolli (fermented rice) is lovely, Soju (gin) is foul.
You will probably find them to be quite physical, a night out with Koreans will involve a lot of playful punching, slapping and pinching. Expect to come home with bruises.
Pour your companions drinks for them, drink after they have drunk, wait for the eldest person at a table to start eating before you touch your own food, attend to their needs before your own - they will respect you (and probably love you) if you follow their basic rules.
You may well find yourself in hostess bar - the women are not whores, they are there to pour your drinks, feed you snacks, laugh at your jokes etc. You do not (normally) get to fuck them.
Places - I've never been to Sacheon, so can't really comment on it, and didn't spend very much time down in that part of SK (I did go to nearby Yeosu, but that was only as a jumping off point to get the boat over to Jeju). There are a number of pretty crappy industrial cities (Pusan, for example, is pretty dire, and when I went it was mostly populated by drunk Russian sailors, desperate for a punch-up - I did oblige them a few times), but there is also some fantastic scenery to be found (in particular Soraksan), and Seoul is an absolutely bonkers city where the very old and the ultra-modern sit side-by-side.
Generally, Korea is a pretty mountainous area, and the flatter parts are usually devoted to rice production.Being a peninsula, there's plenty of coastline, but 'beach culture' isn't very prevalent there (when I was there, most beaches were covered with barbed wire and machine gun nests to counter NK's habit of dropping off commandos by mini-sub).
If you're partial to a temple or two, you'll find plenty there - Pulguksa probably being the most famous.
One thing you will notice is that pretty much every historic site/building has been destroyed and rebuilt numerous times (mostly during the numerous periods of Japanese colonialism, but also during the Korean war).
Anyway, end of my essay. If there's anything else you want to know, drop me a PM or pop them down in this thread and I'll do my best to answer them.
Pulguksa:
https://visitasiaguide.com/visit-korea/pics-korea/pulguksa.jpg
Bit of a banquet:
https://janetnewenham.files.wordpress.com/2010/08/korean_food.jpg
Soraksan NP:
https://seoulhikingroup.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/p6030052.jpg
Jeju-do:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/05/Waterfall_on_Jeju_Island,_Korea.jpg
Hallasan (tallest mountain in SK):
https://www.jejuweekly.com/news/photo/200911/408_598_222.jpg
 ____________________ Space Monkey #7
Don Eladio is dead. His capos are dead. You have no one left to fight for. Fill your pockets and leave in peace. Or fight me and die!
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| Kradmelder |
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 Kradmelder World Chat Champion

Joined: 13 Jun 2012 Karma :     
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 Posted: 16:09 - 28 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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fark me, I hope they have maids to do all those dishes. And so little meat. Unless that brown pile in the middle is stewed dog You would go home starving
That fish staring back at you, pass......
 ____________________ 2011 KTM 990 Dakar
2009 BMW 1200 GS |
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| ProXimaCore |
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 ProXimaCore Dougal

Joined: 01 May 2003 Karma :   
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 Posted: 17:26 - 28 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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I've met a ton of Koreans around Europe while travelling. I've had a 50/50 rate at them being either really nice or total assholes. Same as everywhere else I guess.
I did get along with a bunch of Koreans when I lived in Austria. Infact I even learned to read and write the language. It's probably easier than our written language. My vocabulary isn't much though. It's more that I can read and pronounce something I see but have no idea what it means.
Korean food is the best damn food I ever ate. To me, there is nothing better tasting than all the stuff that mistergixer mentioned. Although he missed out my favourite, Galbi. It's quite similar to Bulgogi. Watch that movie Old Boy if you want to see that live octopus being eaten.
Culturally, age is quite an important thing to pay attention to. Respect your elders is quite an important thing. Even with others around the same age as each other. I was older than all my Korean friends so I didn't have to do anything special. mistergixer pretty much covered it. ____________________ Honda NSR125R -> Suzuki GSXR400R GK76a -> Kawasaki ZX636 B1H -> Honda CBR400RR NC29 -> Nothing  |
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| Joncrete Cungle |
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 Joncrete Cungle World Chat Champion
Joined: 31 Jan 2012 Karma :   
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 Posted: 17:42 - 28 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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| mistergixer |
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 mistergixer World Chat Champion

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| The Artist |
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 The Artist Super Spammer

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| TheDonUK |
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 TheDonUK World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Feb 2006 Karma :   
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 Posted: 18:45 - 28 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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If you can do the gangnam style dance and are good at MMORPGS you will be right in there  ____________________ [Current Bikes - GSXR-750 K5 & C90-97 ] [Previous Bikes: Runner 125, YBR 125, GS500, Bandit 600, Hornet 600, ZX6R-99, C90-99, R1-99, XT600E-04, GSXR-750 K4, CRF250L '16] |
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| Rogerborg |
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 Rogerborg nimbA

Joined: 26 Oct 2010 Karma :    
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 Posted: 19:09 - 28 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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| mistergixer wrote: | https://johnwillett.files.wordpress.com/2010/02/kalbi.jpg |
See, in a civilised nation- like Japan, for example - stabbing chopsticks into food would be considered the act of a retard, or a child, or a retarded child.
You should make a point of asserting that in Korea, they'll really appreciate the lesson in etiquette.  ____________________ Biking is 1/20th as dangerous as horse riding.
GONE: HN125-8, LF-250B, GPz 305, GPZ 500S, Burgman 400 // RIDING: F650GS (800 twin), Royal Enfield Bullet Electra 500 AVL, Ninja 250R because racebike
Last edited by Rogerborg on 22:17 - 28 Sep 2012; edited 2 times in total |
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| mistergixer |
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 mistergixer World Chat Champion

Joined: 15 Jun 2005 Karma :   
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 Posted: 19:23 - 28 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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an child?
Doesn't look like they are 'stabbed in' to me. They also don't look like standard Korean issue chopsticks, which typically are a) metal, b) flat, and c) fiendishly difficult to use as a consequence.
I'd hazard a guess that the (googled) image is not from a restaurant in Korea, but merely from a Korean restaurant. I visited a Korean restaurant in Stockholm, and was shocked when I got given the usual crappy wood 'sticks you get from (for example) an Oriental restaurant over here. I felt like asking them 'WTF are you doing? I want to struggle with my food'.
 ____________________ Space Monkey #7
Don Eladio is dead. His capos are dead. You have no one left to fight for. Fill your pockets and leave in peace. Or fight me and die!
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| Lord Percy |
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 Lord Percy World Chat Champion

Joined: 03 Aug 2012 Karma :  
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 Posted: 20:24 - 28 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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My girlfriend is South Korean.
I think the country is amazing, but then again I think I quite like Asian culture in general. I guess it depends on your outlook and your expectations.
The food is different - sometimes disgusting, sometimes amazing. Meat is more highly valued over there because historically they had none apart from dog and goat. They just had veg and rice and basic stuff, which is why a lot of their staple dishes are just mixed amounts of veg with spices and vinegar and other things to take the boringness away. And their method of food preservation was with some form of garlic, hence kimchi, the famed iconic food of korea. There are different ways to make it, so it sometimes tastes okay and sometimes tastes horrible. Obviously the place is modernised now so meat is largely available, but still vegetarian rice or noodle dishes are the amazingly cheap option. Kimbap is a favourite of mine. To make a comparison, I know a lot of Asians really hate European food because it's so plain. So Korean food might look a little different but it has a lot more flavour if you ask me. Consider that the UK seems to love Chinese, Indian, Thai food etc. Well, Korea is from the same part of the world.
The people are super polite and friendly, and they have a really strong social standing whereby everyone is traditionally considered first by their age. Basically if you're older than someone, then you are 'above' them. It can be annoying when old people do things and nobody stops them (for example I saw an old lady chuck some litter on the floor in the metro in such a blindly disrespectful way, but my girlfriend said we just had to accept it). If somebody is older than you, you absolutely must respect them, unless there's something blatantly wrong that needs sorting out. If your boss wants you to go out on a staff do.... you must. However they might respect you, or be understanding, because you're a foreigner.
I guess you'll start to pick up the language as you go along. The main thing is that they have a polite language and in informal language. It's all the same apart from the polite language has a little bit extra added onto the end of sentences. It's the same as we might say 'sir' or 'madame', but is done in a few more words and is still very mandatory. Again, the division is by age, so if someone is older than you, you must use the polite language, until they become a very very good friend. Also if you don't know somebody, it's nice to use the polite version of sentences, regardless of age. For example if you buy something from a shop and the person at the counter is a teenage student or something, you should still use polite wording. You'll learn as you go though, I'm sure.
I don't know about the more remote or 'faraway' places (in comparison to Seoul), but the Western influence in Korea is mostly American, so expect a lot of that. Do your best to change their American-English accents to a British one. My girlfriend now sounds a lot more British than she used to. Haha.
Koreans have a distinct fashion which is an almost adorable mish-mash of Americanism with their own added hint of doing anything to not look Japanese. In a nutshell, it's baseball caps, sports jackets, thick glasses and New Balance training shoes. A lot of them look quite hipster, too. A Korean friend of mine told me how to recognise a Korean, Japanese or Chinese person just by the fashion. It's surprisingly easy, hah.
The place has a huge coffee-shop culture. They're everywhere, and all individual. There are the obvious chain stores, but a lot of people don't like them. There's one that's on par with Starbucks and their nickname for it means 'cockroach', because it's appearing everywhere.
They have an amazing (scary) work ethic and highly value the idea of a person pushing themselves in terms of dreams, goals, aspirations, education, etc. Lots are studying towards something, regardless of their age. They're a small country fighting a tight but strong corner in the world, so they're of the opinion that their life after school is one of fierce competition to the top. It's done them pretty well so far. Hence Samsung, Hyundai, LG, Hyosung, and a few others I can't remember, all in 50 years or less (since the war). I do wonder how much they've been propped up by the US though.
Just because the language looks like a bunch of symbols, don't think of it as completely alien. They used to speak Chinese but their king 500 years ago decided to simplify it and make it their own. It's now considered one of the most logical languages in the world. So give it a go
Hmmmm what else.....
Get used to saying 'nehhhh' or 'yehhhh' and slightly bowing your head.
I dunno. I find Korea quite lovely. I'm going again in December. It's great in my opinion. Maybe because I don't understand everything yet so the more cynical side of me isn't able to come out and pick it apart.
As the other people in the pro-Korea brigade have said, you can also give me a shout if you have any questions.
I also agree that stabbing the food is traditionally a no no in Korea. Leaving your chopsticks stabbed into your food is representative of the incense sticks they use at a funeral. It signals death in some way.
Oh and the majority of foreigners there are French, American and some Irish, because they have some kind of university partnership scheme.
The worst thing is the American squaddies in Seoul.
Lots of French.
Also lots of Koreans. |
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| mistergixer |
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 mistergixer World Chat Champion

Joined: 15 Jun 2005 Karma :   
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 Posted: 21:03 - 28 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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The term for a 'westerner' is 'Meeguk saram', which means literally 'American person'.
Expect to be pointed at and to hear the term 'Meeguk'.
I found it quite insulting, so used to have a bit of fun with them - I would go up to them and explain politely in Korean that I wasn't American, I was English (Yong-guggi).
Their shocked expressions kept me amused for hours.
Learn to bow, learn a few language basics (yes/no/please/thank you/excuse me etc) and you won't go far wrong. They will make exceptions for you because you are just a Meeguk and don't know any better.
 ____________________ Space Monkey #7
Don Eladio is dead. His capos are dead. You have no one left to fight for. Fill your pockets and leave in peace. Or fight me and die!
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| Rogerborg |
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 Rogerborg nimbA

Joined: 26 Oct 2010 Karma :    
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| owl10 |
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 owl10 Could Be A Chat Bot

Joined: 09 Apr 2010 Karma :  
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| Lord Percy |
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 Lord Percy World Chat Champion

Joined: 03 Aug 2012 Karma :  
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 Posted: 22:47 - 28 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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| Rogerborg wrote: |
To the point where senile old coots will literally fall asleep during business meetings, and it's inconceivable to even acknowledge it, let alone call a halt to proceedings because the only man who can make a decision is snoring and farting. |
It's certainly odd, and will definitely have its frustrating points, but you can't deny the level of obedience among the youngsters there compared to a place like the UK. I went to check out the city skate park in Seoul, and even there the younger ones gave a little bow to anyone there who was remotely older than them. And that was at a skatepark, which is basically a playground where some of the kids are adults. As a skater boy myself, I can say that's quite something, in terms of cultural differences, where Korean wins hands down. Kids at British skate parks cause a nuisance and don't care/want to fight.
I met an American guy who taught English at several Korean universities for a long time. He said he once lost something and suggested, casually, to his students, that it was probably stolen. All the students were immediately apologetic on behalf of their country.
Also, if a few Korean basic words are learned, expect positive results, but also expect people to then jump the gun and throw whole sentences at you in Korean. Hah. |
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| Lord Percy |
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 Lord Percy World Chat Champion

Joined: 03 Aug 2012 Karma :  
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 Posted: 23:14 - 28 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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https://www.talktomeinkorean.com/
Absolutely brilliant and totally free website.
Go to the 'Lessons' tab at the top left, go to Level 1, and begin!
It's all audio lessons, ranging from 5 to 20 minutes, and they all come with small PDFs of 2 or 3 very well presented pages for you to take notes from.
You can download it all for free too.
I used this for only a couple of months, not particularly committed, and now I still consider myself pretty shit at Korean but a lot of Korean friends have been hugely impressed with what I can say.
The toughest bit to get around is learning to read the letters, but once that's done, it's just a case of building your vocabulary - same as any other language in the world!
Key phrases -
Hello - an-nyong-ha-seh-yo
Goodbye - an-nyong-h'-g'ye-seh-yo
Thank you - gam-sah-ham-ni-da
Excuse me (to get attention) - joh-gi-yo
Excuse me (to push past) - jam-shi-man-yo
Please give me - joo-seh-yo (eg. "cola joo-seh-yo")
My advice - DO NOT LEARN these phonetic romanised versions. They're horrible and mind boggling because they're Asian words written in Romanised form, so they look unnatural and highly difficult. In reality they're basic and the language has quite a logical formulation, using simple conjunctions, stems and other connective things that make simple sense. The same as how, for example, we add 'ing' to the end of a lot of verbs to create action. They have a way of doing it too.
So basically, learn to read and speak basic Korean using their own alphabetic system, and the everyday niceties will be much easier to learn. Writing everything Asian words down in English is silly.
Although you'll notice a lot of English words integrated into Korean. They call it Konglish. Haha.
Eg.
컴퓨터 - Kom-pyoo-tuh
카메라 - Ka-meh-rah
Ham-boh-goh
yoh-k'-shyu-tee
Can you figure them out?
Also, informally, in text messaging and the likes, Koreans don't say lol for funny things, they say 'kkkkkk', which is representative of a kind of playful snickering. So if they write a message to you in English and it finished with 'kk', it doesn't mean 'okay', it means 'haha'. |
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| mistergixer |
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 mistergixer World Chat Champion

Joined: 15 Jun 2005 Karma :   
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 Posted: 23:24 - 28 Sep 2012 Post subject: |
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| owl10 wrote: |
Would either of you mind writing the basic please / thank you etc in a phonetically appropriate way for me?
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Basics - note that my Romanised spelling is probably incorrect, and these are my attempts at phoeneticising (sp?) the words:
Yes
Ne: Neigh
No
Annio: Anne-ee-oh
Hello (informal, to someone younger)
Annyong Haseyo: Anne-yong Hah-say-oh.
Hello (formal)
Annyong Hashimnika: Anne-yong Hash-im-knee-kar
Please
Shipseyo: Ship-she-oh
Thank you
Kamsa Hamnida: Cam-sah Ham-knee-dar
Excuse me
Shillye Hamnida: Shill-yay Ham-knee-dar
Excuse me (part 2)
(note - not really excuse me, more to get someone's attention, also used as a telephone greeting)
Yobo seyo: Yo-boh Say-oh
Excuse me (part 3)
(This is relatively 'rude', and should only really be used to get the attention of someone in a bar or similar)
Yogeyo - Yog-eeh-yo
Sorry
Mianhamnida: Me-anne-ham-knee-dar
Do you speak English?
Yongo-rul haseyo: Yong-goh-rule Hah-say-oh
Where are the toilets?
Hwajangshil odie ee-sumnika: Waa-jang-sheel Oh-dee Ee Sum-knee-car
The most important one....
Beer
Maekju: Make-jew
Edit: just seen the post above mine, and he speaks sense - romanisation is terrible. It's a phoenetic language, so needs to be pronounced correctly to be understood. Thankfully, with the modern t'internet you can probably find loads of online pronunciation lessons.
The one that always got me was 'goodbye' - it differs whether you are the person going, or being left, and I could never get my head around it.
Just to confuse you even more, the Koreans use 2 numbering systems (one based on Chinese, one uniquely Korean, which only goes up to 100). They are used in different circumstances (money uses the Chinese, for example), so really you need to learn both, at least up to 10 .
Example:
1, 2, 3, 4
Korean
Hannah, dool, set, net
Chinese
Il, ee, sam, saw
To make it even even more confusing, the Korean numbers drop the ending when they refer to something - for example 'one person' (as in, for example, asking for a restaurant table for one) is 'han saram'.
Confused? Good. It's a sneaky Korean trap to melt the brains of Meeguks.
 ____________________ Space Monkey #7
Don Eladio is dead. His capos are dead. You have no one left to fight for. Fill your pockets and leave in peace. Or fight me and die!
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 13 years, 227 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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