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Is There Any Korean Website Seems Yahoo Answer

Translations? English to Korean! 10 pts first answer!!!!!!?

Ok I need to know the english to korean translation for "thank you" and i need to know the korean symbols. Its a school project and i can't have those little square boxes that always show up when i do a translation, i need the actual characters. Are there any websites?

Is there a Korean version of the American Playboy website?

There have been Chinese and Japanese editions of this magazine. I see that a Chinese version is now called "Grace". Japan has also had a weekly "Pureiboi" that copies the name of the American magazine.

Learning Korean: Tips, websites, books?

These recommendations assume you've learned Hangul. If you've already learned Hangul and think I'm an idiot for even proposing the possibility that you hadn't, then ignore this. If you haven't learned Hangul, you will get a whole lot of nowhere until you do.

Beginner/generally useful:
http://endic.naver.com/
http://wordshowers.willkern.com/
http://www.talktomeinkorean.com/
http://lang-8.com/

Upper beginner/intermediate:
http://www.language.berkeley.edu/korean/10/
http://koreanselfstudyisntlame.blogspot.com/
청개구리의 눈물 by Hye-Sook Wang
Intermediate Korean: A Grammar and Workbook by Andrew Sangpil Byon

Why do people prefer Quora over Yahoo! Answers?

Oh boy, this is going to be fun.Q1: Why do we need water to survive?Quora: Our bodies are mostly made of water, so we need to continually replenish our water supply in order to survive.Yahoo! Answers: WE DONT!!! I ACTUALY FOUND A HEALTHY WATER SUBSTITUTE IF U GUYS R INTRESTED!!!!!!!Q2: What is 2+2?Quora: 2+2 is equal to 4. For instance, imagine you had two cookies and your friend gave you two more. How many do you have now? You now have 4 cookies.Yahoo! Answers: 2+2 is an aDITION PROBLOM. your duMb.Q3: Why is the grass green?Quora: Grass and many other plants have a pigment called chlorophyll which absorbs light to be used for photosynthesis. However, green light is the one wavelength in the spectrum that chlorophyll cannot absorb. Therefore, it is reflected back to our eyes, which perceive the grass to be green.Yahoo! Answers: the same reason teh skys blue god made it that way now just be happyBONUS: Yahoo! Answers strikes back!I’ll let you be the judge of why people prefer Quora.

Why is Quora more popular than Yahoo Answers? What elements make it the more popular Q&A site?

A couple of years back, early 2015 I guess, I wanted to know about the basics of big data and its importance in industry.I googled “What is Big data”The first link popped up was Wikipedia - I opened in a new tab and set it aside.The second link was from Yahoo answers. I opened and was looking for some useful information.There were answers like:I was confused, irritated and most of the answers didn’t answer the question.The next link which popped was from Quora.I could find answers like this:Answer was by Balaji Viswanathan (பாலாஜி விஸ்வநாதன்) sir. That is the moment I followed him and read his other answers too! And that was the moment i decided not to refer yahoo answers for anything in future.Unlike Yahoo answers, Why was the answer better?It summed up all the information - technical explanation with real life examplesPictures made it easier for me to connect with answerThe credential “Ran a Big data company” made me believe the answer is from someone trustworthy.Upvotes and comments of appreciation from people in related field made me feel secured about the answerComments were healthy and was debating its future application.So, with no further discussions, Quora is always better than Yahoo answers.

Best Korean Drama site?

Hey guys, I've been watching korean dramas for a bit long time. But dramacrazy.net shut down their site also with mysoju. So, for free, hd and online watching, could you guys give me some site names? That would help a lot!! Especially with watching You're the best, Lee Soon Shin.
I already know dramafever but I'm not premium user, so yeah ;/

Does anyone know a good traditional Korean recipe?

Well, I'm partial to Korean sushi, but maybe that's not right for you if you're not into eating things that are still moving. Perhaps kim-chi would be more western friendly.

Okay, it goes like this. Get a large earthenware jar or a five gallon bucket. Here are the ingredients you'll need.

4 heads napa cabbage
1/2 pound fresh ginger
5 cloves garlic (not to be confused with toes)
2 cups ground Korean chili (cayenne, slightly hotter substitute)
1 bunch green onions
1 large daikon radish
2 cups sugar
1 cup sea salt

Okay, you'll need to chop the cabbage (some just quarter them) into reasonable sized cuttings. Soak them in salt water four four to six hours until leaves are no longer crisp. Wash thoroughly until the leaves are only palatably salty. You'll need to shred the ginger and grate the radish (cheese graters are good for that). Chop the green onion leaves about an inch or less long and chop the onion itself thinner. Grind or crush garlic into paste. Combine radish, ginger, onion, sugar, and ground chili into the napa leaves and mix the sauce in well with the cabbage. Refill with water until leaves are covered (be sure that you weigh the leaves down as you're filling).

Traditional kim-chi would be sealed in an clay jar and buried for extended period of time (I've heard of it being buried for three months). If you don't want to bury it, be sure to place it in a room that can maintain a temperature of 72 degrees. Check once a week until it is fermented to your taste (three to six weeks is my standard). Don't be surprised if it has a strong odor. This is normal for fermented cabbage. I assure you, it's perfectly safe to eat. As it sits, the sugars are turned to vinegar and a sort of pickling takes place. This is a must at any Korean social event.

Is there a Spanish language website, app or service that is similar to Quora?

There is nothing exactly like Quora. There is Yahoo! Respuestas and there is the Spanish Wikipedia, but they are certainly not the same.There used to be something called respuest.as that looked like a blatant ripoff of Quora, but it's now been taken off the web.

Is there a site like Quora also in Korea, mainland China, Taiwan and/or Japan?

There is one site called Zhihu (literally "Do you know" in Ancient Chinese) in China. It is, well, almost identical to Quora. One can say that it's a Chinese copy of Quora. A few years ago it used to be more exclusive and one can only join when invited by a member, yet now its door's been wide open for all for nearly a year. As a result, the average quality of questions and answers falls a bit, but more people- like me- can learn from it. It has 4 million members now and the atmosphere there is more rational, open, and friendlier than most other popular social websites in China. I am a high school student in China and I find quite some people around me on Zhihu too, enjoying the learning  & sharing.edit: The site's name in Chinese is 知乎. And here's a link: 知乎 - 与世界分享你的知识、经验和见解 Thanks Aaron Cai for reminding me to add these!

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