No, the plug used in South Korea is different from the one used in Europe.
No, the plug used in Korea is different from the one used in Europe. Korea uses a plug type that is unique to the country, while Europe typically uses the Type C or Type F plugs.
Yes there are what are known as adapters to enable different kinds of plugs to be used in Europe.
A Type C plug has two round pins and is commonly used in Europe, while a Type F plug has two round pins with two grounding clips on the sides and is also used in Europe. The main difference is the presence of grounding clips on the Type F plug.
Han-geul(한글) is used in South Korea. North and South Korea use same language but there's some different words.
The UK, Eire, Malta and Cyprus use the 'G' type plug, which has rectangular pins and is larger than the plugs used in northern Europe.
Yes, DPR is short for Korea (Democratic People's Republic). It is used during sporting events when the two Korean nations participate in the same event.
Both use the same kind of 3 pin plug.
yes
The same clothes as the rest of Europe.
The same sort of technologies as are used in most developed countries.
With the exception of the new "jets" the very same equipment that was used in WWII was used in Korea. Some may argue that the M46 Patton tank was new, however that was simply an upgraded WWII M26 Pershing 90mm (medium) gun tank. Otherwise, same rifles, same helmets, same trucks, same airplanes, same bombers, same warships, same jeeps (1/4 tons), same rations and same tanks. Also, in many cases, the same men (WWII servicemen also fought in Korea). There was only a five year gap between WWII & Korea.