It Basically Is Another Term For Couple. ^_^
it depends on who you are saying it to. if it is someone your age like a friend you say it like mi-han. but if you are saying it to a much older person you say mi- han - hi-say-yo.
Saying fighting is like saying good luck,
boowho
People say 'boo' on Halloween because it is considered as a 'spooky' time, usually pretending to scare someone.
To say lucky in Korean, one can say un-i joh-eun. This is the colloquial or informal way of saying lucky. The Korean language, however, has a wide variety of dialects and levels of formality.
The phrase "boo" is commonly associated with ghosts in popular culture, but there isn't a specific reason why ghosts are depicted as saying "boo." It is likely just a theatrical convention that has been perpetuated over time in literature, movies, and Halloween traditions.
On halloween When hiding to scare someone Calling someone you care for, like "babe"
Because on the movies that's the "sound" for the ghosts!!
In Hawaiian, "boo boo" could be translated as "hau'oli" which means "sore" or "injured."
There is a phrase in english. "You took the words right out of my mouth". This means saying what someone else was about to say.
The word "part" in Korean is "bubun". This is just the casual way of saying it/the way it is said in everyday speech. 부분 written like this in Korean. This also has the meanings of section or piece.
The word "part" in Korean is "bubun". This is just the casual way of saying it/the way it is said in everyday speech. 부분 written like this in Korean. This also has the meanings of section or piece.