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Tolkien and Lewis refer to him. He wrote one violent scene after another. I only wish you did have a Korean production company after your thoughts on Jang Hyuk as Hamlet! Time will tell if that continues.

We are only 2 eps in. Oh yes, that scene of him leaping across those poles was pretty amazing! As for Tae Ha vs. Dae Gil, if memory serves, I believe there were 2 camps of viewers when this show aired; those who preferred Dae Gil, and those who preferred Tae Ha.

As for me.. I could hardly see anyone else, after Dae Gil established his swaggery self on my screen, lol. I remember preferring Taylor Lautner too, though! Tell me please you prefer Song Joong Ki. By the way I have been to those woods in Washington, and the writer of that series seriously missed out on the possibilities, not to mention the likely indigenous lore concerning magical beings inhabiting the rain forest and the north Washington shore. For me, as a guy, Tae Ha wins in that second grouping, hands down.

When they get there, someone shows the dad a photo of his wife before he met her with a hot guy on a motorcycle. The dad is played by John Hawkes, who some will remember as the partner and best friend of alpha-male sheriff Seth Bullock in Deadwood. Suffice to say, John Hawkes is NOT an alpha male, nor a hot guy, and in this movie they take that to an extreme.

And eventually receives some solid wisdom on the subject from an attractive young con-woman. She still steals his car, however! Thanks, merij1. I view them as very similar characters and obviously confused them in my mind.

Hi Beez! That one act of kindness was not enough to impress me. I was even thrilled when he described himself in less than complimentary terms and then admitted he was the scoundrel in the flesh! I lean more towards Tae Ha as his ethics are more firm, which is a quality I greatly value in a partner. There is an element of heroic tragedy to great sageuks.

I am a man who has always leaned in toward the life of a common man. And since it strikes me that some fellas get lucky and others do not. I am a female but if given a choice this is what it would be: I have a soft spot for Tae-Ha and I might end up liking him….

I am all for ethics and stuff like that…etc etc…but leaving all that for a moment. One and Two — Hands down Dae-Gil….. He might come across as unethical or not so world-wise…..

Three and Four — If I have to choose as a male, I would still go with Dae-Gil because its just an interesting life to live and experience….. I really like honest ethical people but sometimes it becomes too one dimensional and its just nice to experience the various aspects of life including having shades of grey or being bad for a certain time….

You crack me up. BE — yup. I can just see it. Someone told me a long time ago that it switched over to only being used younger female to older female sister but they never told me how or why. Maybe Snow Flower or Kfangurl can help me out here?

Not sure on the hows or whys.. It was Secret Garden where he looked all sharp angles. Similarly Li Po is now Li Pai. Given that their stature in the west is so attached to the initial orthographic representation, it will take a long time for the newer spellings to elicit anything more than confusion for all but the avid followers of them where they are not being discussed by actual Chinese readers and speakers.

There are several different romanization systems in Korean, I believe, so that is probably what complicates matters. Do share, when you find out why! Choi, thinking that I was about to meet a Korean and not a Chinese person. Back in university I had some korean exchange students and they told.

These syllables are what create the words rather than the way individual English letters do. There are just some more similiar and some less similiar. I mean it is a lot easier to translate english into german than korean into german. And there is also the difference of direct language like german you say every word you need and context languages like korean if it was clarfied in a earlier sentence u can leave some words out , etc. I hear deh. It is a vowel based language, having 7 vowel sounds unlike English or German or Arabic or Wolof, all consonant based languages.

Spanish and Italian are also vowel based, in that the pronunciation of words is created by the mouth forming vowel structures. As a result, most popular Congolese music has no end rhymes, but rather is so chock a block with assonance that end rhyme would be redundant.

Similarly, though contrariwise, poetry in Spanish and Italian continued to rhyme far after it became retrograde to do so in English, because English rhyming tends to be consonant based, meaning percussive, whereas Spanish rhymes are melodic—vowel sound. In America, hip hop performers became early on aware of the percussive possibilities of American English endrhymes turning vocals into percussive dance music instruments. But since I only know Korean through these dramas and some popular music, I am only going on intuition.

Well that was interesting. Oy vay! We start with formal so as not to inadvertently be rude to someone. That is, the other two forms are spoken quickly, whereas the yay sound is spoken all the way out, and seems to be meant to imply an affirmation or concession of what the other person has just told him or her. In Mr. I am from a different culture, one in which informality—So Cal growing up in post WW2—and slang governed both my linguistic and cultural understanding of others.

When I taught, I told my students to call me by what they felt most comfortable with, professor, Mr. Community college English students are so antsy, and I wanted to make sure that however they viewed their relationship with their teachers, especially given the vast gulf between my subject mastery and theirs, I could tolerate and adapt to. I must admit that I wore a tie to the first two weeks of classes, and after that I was as likely to come to class in a tee shirt.

I intentionally changed and alternated how I dressed, because I wanted to emphasize to them that learning was on them, not on their teachers, who could only be relied upon so much, the reality being some teachers are lousy, some okay, a few really great, and appearances had little to do with that. Seeing these dramas, I am coming to realize that even in English, with its encyclopedic vocabulary allowing for precise communication, still tone and context, usage all convey meaning. I had a student from Senegal.

She had never seen a game of baseball in her life. As you can imagine, I enjoy the pun. I was curious as to what you meant each time? Hesitant to answer because I was going to make a corny pun joke. You tell me that the word I presented in Hangul is spoken as awwww, but I have only and repeatedly heard it pronounced as OH!

So I was making a joke on the pun of yes and oh! Neh, Neh. Thanks for the Choi sisters on neh. They are a whole lot more fun, and very good teachers, than that American guy you turned me on to before who explained levels of honorific or lack thereof.

All language lessons should be taught by people having so much silly fun while giving them. I had always recognized all those usages. I do not know if my habits of language would keep me from making them in my own speaking. But I understand all of them, and with subtitles alongside, never have a problem as such. Go billy on YouTube has a good explaination on the Korean characters sound and the problem it has when it is Romanized. For me though, I made it easy for myself by just saying the Words as if I have a cold.

Frankly English is a pretty weird language. English, particularly American English: no regular vowel sounds and different pronounciation of those sounds by region. No regular phonetic structure as in Spanish in which structure is regulated by syllable. Also the problem in all indo European languages of inflection rather than context delivering subject and temporal reality. Then of course anomalies like getting on a bus instead of in one.

A ton of impossible to remember rules. The one advantage of English is that the rivers of world languages have poured into it, plus the improvisational nature of language invention by demographic groups not part of the mainstream affecting youth—gigantic vocabulary, thus, allowing for particularity. Up tight—cool…. BE — yes. I first tried learning Korean by books.

In Korean since it is so inflected by social relationship, it strikes me that it may also have some sort of subversive element because by all intents and purposes informal hits the linguistic street well before formal, which has to be codified by schools. I would not be surprised given your point K that Korean previously adopted Chinese usages and Japanese usages as well, or even Russian usages.

My best language teacher had his class spend 8 weeks just forming our mouths and making us mindful of tongue and teeth in which we started just by repeating the sounds of words and then rudimentary conversation in Spanish. We did not learn grammar; we did not deal with it in the written form. He was a phoneticist and a linguist, who also taught indoeuropean lingquitic and phonetic courses they were taught in Spanish , which taught me more about language than all the courses in any school or program I had ever entered or witnessed.

Since I do not listen to much Kpop and I have picked up what I know of Korean, much the way I picked up what I know of Lingala, from simply being an avid fan of the popular art, in this case drama, almost by osmosis and immersion. But I do wonder about Kpop a bit. BTS seem to know English. And this might be a vehicle for making more money. But IU seems so far to be content with Asian audiences and yet her songs are filled with not just single words, but phrases as well.

Dalloway, I love your party! And yes, the singer notes early on over there, so to speak, a couple kisseu. I dig it, bout all I can say. Finally, it also does seem that sageuks make use of a more antiquated social position embedded Korean, but that still remains a mystery. Does the court speak a different Korean than the jumos and local merchants, workers, slaves? I am not a BTS fan myself, but I will say their status as popular music phenomena has taken them beyond boy band ooey gooey into something far more pervasive and cross generational.

I felt somewhat squeamish about following IU at first, especially since she looks ten years younger than she actually is, but I have to say I am a fan, I think she is a popular music genius check the vid I posted on Reply and my comment following it , and someone who I find much akin to what I felt about the Beatles in the mid sixties—the irrepressible spirit of youth. She is fun to watch. So I think probably BTS does the same for others, and I am certain that there were folks our age who knew a whole ton about John Lennon by the mid sixties, and were curious about them, and like you knew a whole bunch.

And one might connect this to hangul orthographic word construction. Nonetheless, I might have made some money as their publicist early on throwing that idea out there. It bugs me because it seems so obvious, the way they slow down to pronounce and enunciate com-pute-ter and ice cream, for example. It seems the very fact that they slow down should inform them. Yet, I was watching a Korean talk-variety show called Non Summit aka Abnormal Summit which consists of Korean hosts and foreigners who are fluent in Korean, discussing cultural differences.

On one episode, the French representative was extremely rude while not intending to be to the French-Canadian rep. But he could not accept that the language that French-Canadians speak is French.

He viewed it as an aberration and abhorrent mangling of his language. And yet, I experience the same reaction as the French gentlemen to Konglish coined by Dramabeans.

I needed to voice that somewhere. But then again, our British friends might feel that American-English is a butchered version of English. It is first learned by kids in school, and really only a phenomenon in the next generation when the child learns English in the home through prespeech listening. Pronunciation is specifically a function of listening and from earliest speech articulating phonemes in the mouth to structure the sound accurately.

Of course, actors are seemingly able to be trained, and some folks who really work at it with conscious attention, but that is not most of us.

Spanish is probably the most widely spoken non English language in the US these days. From first speech, all spoken Spanish is formed by syllable, why English speakers have such a hard time speaking it when we tend to have the unconscious habit of forming our language by whole words. Sometimes because of how syllables are formed in Spanish the last sound of one word, a short sound of another usually in a form in which a letter might be elided with an apostrophe placer, and the beginning sound of third word can be contained all in the same syllable.

When I moved to Texas, some local pronunciations cracked me up. I live near the town of Llano, not yawn-oh as I presumed it would be called but lllllaaaah-no. I was trying my darndest to find Machaca Blvd in Austin when I first moved here.

I never was a real stickler. Before I went back to school to teach, I wrote poetry without any punctuation at all, all lower case, because I wanted to develop my ability to amplify meaning. These days my eyes are gone, and I pitifully make simple errors, comma usage errors, pronoun antecedent errors, all of em seemingly, in part cause I am too lazy to proof read, in part because I had my eyes immersed in them millions and millions of times for decades.

When I was young I would take a whole month to revise a ten line poem, maybe 50 revisions. Then I spent decades grading community college writing. Except that it is embarrassing to have people know I taught English and now my writing is an obstacle course of minor error, I dunno being 74 means I get to not care much about a lot of things. However, you worked in a legal field. Accuracy in language, or should I say inaccuracy is very well likely to have instilled an error cringe in your sensability.

And my experience is native speakers who have been told all their lives about their mistakes have as many problems as first and second gen Americans. As a poet, I am lucky cause I love the way language evolves, and weird accidents. I am quite astonished that so much contemporary Korean has adopted so much English vocabulary. No, the show is fully spoken in Korean with Korean hosts and foreign guests who are fluent in Korean.

I think it makes total sense that English words are so prevalent in Korean society. When you consider the history of the Korean war and where Korea was at economically at the time and the American presence. Koreans over 80 were grateful to America and tended to pass that impression down to their children.

I get that there might not be if the product coffee was introduced from the west. If it were just some students mistakenly emphasizing it, then that would be fine. The reason that English is taught that way, is because they romanize English words using Hangul, to make it accessible to students. Japan does the same.

My point, though, is that when they are speaking Korean, these words are considered newer additions to the Korean language, rather than English words being mashed into a Korean sentence. When that is the case, the original English pronunciation is no longer relevant to the discussion. New goals! A lesson everyday. A lesson every day sounds like a good goal!

Maybe some miracle will happen and the local community center will have classes where I can practice with other newbies. Does anyone know the names of those apps? Prashil Prakash — you literally made laugh out loud. I often try to keep my lips tight in a mumble because to me Koreans do the opposite of enunciate their language. Well, I have several copies of the Tao te Ching, but I have never heard it pronounced anything other than dao.

In poetry circles among English speaking folk in the US, Li Pai has begun to catch on instead of Li Po, but say Du Fu to poets who have read his poetry in translation, and they will ask you who you are talking about.

BE KFG — haha! You bringing to mind, nothing so deep for me, but I recall a Canadian Kdrama vlogger who was living in S. Obviously l, a liquid—half vowel, half consonant sound, and y have some connection in where on the tongue one makes each articulated.

Maybe someone else here can explain why in English we add the L or Y to these names? Verrry interesting. I managed to find the answer here. So I use a combination of what I know of the Chinese characters, and Google. To think that she got taken to task for saying something right! I hope her western viewers realized the error of their ways! Well, well, well. The first episode was a bit hard to get through because I had to get to grips with the treatment of women and slaves during those times.

Of course I was aware of it but the visualisation is still hard to watch. The cinematography is great and movie-like. Very enjoyable. Most other 10 year old shows would show their age more readily, I feel like. It was a simple Google search and there were many other links that looked just as promising. I stopped opening them after finding a few good ones.

So I suspect you are not alone in your interest! Tip: I locate the better illustrated sites by switching to the Images tab on Google search after typing my search criteria.

Just out of curiosity, did it seem odd to you that the patch was on the top of her sock rather than at the toe or heel, where socks frequently wear out first? I love the Spaghetti Western comparison. These hombres or three amigos are an awesome team.

Jane Tilly — those socks! They were in tatters. And yes, I did notice the weird placement of the patch. Although, thinking about where the seams are in saeguk socks, running up the front and back instead of the sides of the foot — maybe that is not as weird as I first thought. But I saw no seam above or below that patch. Those socks were just strips of rags! How does Lee Dae hae still manage to look so elegant though? I think we do not really know how much we take shoes for granted.

I do know men and women both love high heels, but from my perspective, why would anyone not want their feet to be comfortable; high heels to me seem somewhat barbaric.

Especially when considering how people have historically been so poorly shod. Can you imagine Korean winters in even the best of those old twine shoes? Connect with D. I allow to create an account. When you login first time using a Social Login button, we collect your account public profile information shared by Social Login provider, based on your privacy settings.

We also get your email address to automatically create an account for you in our website. Once your account is created, you'll be logged-in to this account.

Disagree Agree. Notify of. Inline Feedbacks. Reply to Jiyuu. Reply to seankfletcher. Reply to BE. Reply to beez. Reply to merij1. Reply to reaper And happy Thanksgiving to those who celebrate it. Reply to j3ffc. Princess Jasmine.

To avoid spoilers, I will restrict my views on the first 2 episodes: Brilliant cinematography and shot compositions, great action sequences and good acting…. Reply to Princess Jasmine. Ok I will do that right away as I am yet to get around writing my bit for Healer;. Reply to PrincessJasmine. I believe it was, in fact, made as if it were for the big screen.

Prashil Prakash. Reply to Prashil Prakash. I feel like I should be updating my resume. Now that pink slips are raining down like men! In fact, you are more than welcome to head on over now and begin posting. If you have any threads you'd like to transfer over, now would be the time. So once again thank you, and especially those that contributed their time and knowledge to make Guru the amazing place it was.

We'll see you over at Guild Wars 2 Guru! I've been getting 10 consistently with about sec leftover using 2 healer hench and the paragon hench Be sure to get the mob of 3 mandragors near the rock outcrop north of the rez shrine in the corner.

GL EDIT: I just found out the crocodile eats that mob of kournans too, so would be easy to do with this setup - but really no point unless you can get Brett use the technique I mentioned on page I get around 3 juni berries each 3 minutes. Sometimes i get bad luck and only get 2, but it's usually 3. My last 15 came from 5 runs. Well, this is annoying. Not the farming the quest thing; I've got an ele in the middle of NF anyway and I'd been meaning to pick up some berries for her incubator kit.

So his location truly is "random", at least in terms of predictions. Though this does confirm something I said a while back, when I suggested that he might collect those quest items you can get a ton of for no good reason, like Swamp Flowers Soooo, predictions are going to be a lot more interesting now Kudos to ANet for recognizing and responding in kind.

Getting the berries is a pain in the u know what but I had not been this into build work in about a year. Originally Posted by zelgadissan, last week. I'm going to quote myself after he moves so you can all either point and laugh or stand in awe. Originally Posted by esthetic. I swear Toma has no idea how to use Feeding Frenzy It was a pain but i finally got all i needed for my 4 accounts, here is what i got:.

NM ty ANet, running suckers for ea effin A! My 5 presents where shit though. Originally Posted by garethporlest How are you guys getting over 15? I'm actually really impressed by the concept behind what you've had to collect just in three weeks - the designers have really put some thought behind getting people to revisit areas, and revisit or discover for the first time certain game mechanics.

Week One - collecting something directly related to game lore. I think it's totally cool that even 4 years later there's rewards for long time players, AND things put in place to teach newcomers. Rock on Linsey and team. Originally Posted by Asimo. I told you, to get over 15 use my or one of the other minion methods on the past few pages. You will be able to get over 15 almost every other time. Originally Posted by RoyalScion.

Lawl, 5 presents: 5 green rock candies 15 blue rock candies 5 red Rock candies QQ. Originally Posted by Voodoo Rage. I farmed an extra 15 for my 2nd account and forgot that I didn't have factions on that one Show Printable Version.

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