A commonly used greeting in Korean is안녕하세요 (annyeonghaseyo), which can be used to mean "hello", "good morning", "good afternoon" and also "good evening".
you say it: ge-tte-lo-stte-eg-ghed
In the evening. Or some say "of an evening"
it is in the evening....
A commonly used greeting in Korean is안녕하세요 (annyeonghaseyo), which can be used to mean "hello", "good morning", "good afternoon" and also "good evening".
"In the evening"
Corrine has no meaning in Korean. Only Korean names have meaning in Korean.
Korean men marry Korean woman to cling family lineage. Whereas Korean woman can marry non-Korean men. Percentage intercultural marriage between Korean woman non- Korean men is much highter then Korean men.
The distinction is not made in Korean like it is in English, so usually 'annyeonghaseyo' (an-nyeong-ha-se-yo) suffices for each situation. In colloquial situations, for example between friends or to someone younger than yourself, you might say 'annyeong'.
yes! it is a Korean band!
Classical Korean refers to the native Korean vocabulary, while Sino-Korean refers to the vocabulary borrowed from Chinese. The separation between these two classes of Korean began during the Three Kingdoms period (57 BCE – 668 CE) when Korean began to incorporate Chinese loanwords.
If you're Korean you are Asian. She is Korean.