Most Recent Messages of Each Discussion |
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Re:A korean teacher
Hi Amairany! I am a Korean-American who would love to learn more Spanish! I can teach you many things about Korea if you would like.
From, Gina
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Language pair: English; Korean
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Gina P.
March 5, 2016
# Msgs: 6
Latest: May 13, 2016
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Hello
Hi.... Am Betty I will be happy to learn more about korean email me
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Language pair: English; Korean
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Betty i.
February 28, 2016
# Msgs: 1
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A korean teacher
I'm mexican and I really want to learn many things about korea. I'm not golden so please contact me!
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Language pair: Spanish; Korean
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Amairany S.
February 28, 2016
# Msgs: 6
Latest: May 13, 2016
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A korean teacher
I'm mexican and I really want to learn many things about korea. I'm not golden so please contact me!
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Language pair: Spanish; Korean
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Amairany S.
February 28, 2016
# Msgs: 1
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Can someone help me translate this to Korean?
I miss you, I know that when I speak in this manner I am driving you mad, I will now temporarily avoid you (for some time) to make amendments for my mistakes, Time will be the answer for how much I love you, if after some time I find another person then I do not deserve this love...I don't need you to love me back, I am willing to go for unrequited love, sleep tight, time will tell me the real answer whether it was true love I have for you or I am just simply a love sick girl
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Language pair: English; Korean
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Thang L.
February 1, 2016
# Msgs: 1
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Translation
Could someone help me translating this into Korean?: I refuse to sink.
Thank you :)
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Language pair: English; Korean
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Elia G.
January 6, 2016
# Msgs: 1
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Dee
December 25, 2015
# Msgs: 5
Latest: December 25, 2015
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Dee
December 25, 2015
# Msgs: 5
Latest: December 25, 2015
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Re:How does Korean translate to English and vice versa?
It's like...you have an apple on the table, and an American would think as 'an apple,' a Hispanic 'una mansana.' a Korean '사과' (sa-gwa). Same thing but different pronunciation. Moreover, Korean has little bit different grammar, totally different alphabet (Hangeul) from English like other languages do.
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Language pair: English; Korean
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Hoyoung
December 22, 2015
# Msgs: 5
Latest: December 25, 2015
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Re:Re:how to say hello in korea
Yes. It is almost correct. But there are something wrong.
The correct spelling is "안녕하세요, 친구야."
Also, "Anneonghasaeyo" is higher way to say "hi". It means someone who are heard it are higher than you like a teacher or people who are older than you. A lower way to say "hi" is "Anneong"(안녕). "chingu" is usually your friend, and he or she is the same class as you. You don't need to say politely to your friend.
Thus, both of them are correct. "안녕 친구야. Anneng chinguya" or "안녕하세요Annenghasaeyo"
On the internet, you should say "안녕하세요Anneonghasaeyo" because it is a polite way.
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Language pair: Korean; English
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Gyoengsu H.
December 6, 2015
# Msgs: 5
Latest: December 6, 2015
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