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What Is This Girl Saying In Korean

How do you say "beautiful girl" in Korean? :)?

beautiful (basic form) 예쁘다 (yeppuda)
girl 여자 (yoja)

beautiful girl = 예쁜 여자 (yeppun yoja)

but when you say it a girl, "예뻐요" (yeppoyo)

when you point a girl and say she's beautiful 그 여자 예뻐요 (ku yoja yeppoyo)

Do you like South Korean girls?

Sure, I think they are beautiful inside and outside. Having lived in Korea before, I’m pretty aware that most Korean girls haven’t had plastic surgery or even if they did only did their eyelids which is a very small minor thing anyways (don’t believe the rumors that most Korean girls did surgery, its not true). But even if they did, it doesn’t matter to me. They care about their appearance a lot, that’s part of the reason.Since I care about my appearance, I like girls who also cares about their appearance as well. Most Korean girls wear makeup whenever they go outside, dress very feminine which I also like, and are generally nice and polite people and treat their boyfriends and husbands well and do alot for them.Sure there’s ‘bad’ girls, but there’s ‘bad’ girls everywhere not limited to Korea. My female friends I made in Korea have all been very nice and polite to me. Dating is maybe different because as another poster said, they tend to get very jealous and some of them won’t let you meet with or see other girls. I’m ok with that though, because if you have a beautiful, sweet loving Korean girlfriend why would you need to see other girls? I realize some people say Korean girls are ‘tough’ but none of my ex girlfriends have been that way. I wouldn’t say they are ‘subservient’ but they asked for what kind of style I liked and they tried their best to make themselves into that style.I also like Korean culture a lot so it all fits into why I prefer Korean girls. They are also the perfect ‘middle ground’ between Japanese girls and Chinese girls. Japanese girls I find too polite to the point where you have no idea what they are thinking about, and Chinese girls are too strong and blunt and IMO don’t really do as much for guys yet expect guys to do everything for them. In addition they are way too materialistic and nationalistic. Korean girls are more like Japanese girls but will speak their mind when they want to let you know something, which is perfect for me.Korean girls get a bad rep because of the whole ‘plastic surgery’ thing which is a shame, because they really are amazing women to be with.

What kind of girls do Korean guys like?

Feminine women. Korea has strong gender defined roles, and thus Korean men have certain expectations of women. Have to have good skin, good fashion sense, slim, etc and really care about them i.e text and call and message them a lot. This is Korean culture. Additionally, Korean guys are known to be very controlling, I’ve heard this from several Korean women already. In fact I’ve heard that the recent #MeToo movement in Korea has produced a #YouToo movement as well, basically guys revolting against the feminism, because they want their women to be girly, feminine, soft, submissive, etc and hate that Korean women are getting stronger. They call some Korean girls ‘kimchi women’ because they don’t like to pay for every date.Do you know what the #1 thing Korean guys hate about Korean girls? paying for them on dates. Yup, the thing that every guy does for girls around the world. I’m not even going to get into the % of Korean guys that cheat or that Korean women have the highest burden of household duties in the OECD, but you can look that up.So if you like that, then by all means go for Korean guys. You’ve been warned.

How do you say 'who is she/he' in Korean?

"who" in korean is "누구?" (nugu?)but depending on who you're talking to it can be a bit rude to just say that.

If you want to politely ask somebody if they know who somebody else is, you can ask "그 사람이 누구예요?" (geu saram-i nugu ye yo?" which means "Who is that person?". You can use it when you are talking about boys or girls. If you want to be less formal, like if you're asking a friend, you can say "누구야? (nugu ya?) instead.

if you want to be specific about gender, you could say either:

그 남자 누구예요? Geu namja nugu ye yo? Who is that guy?
그 여자 누구예요? Geu yeoja nugu ye yo? Who is that girl?

How do you know if a Korean girl likes you?

listen: you need to stop thinking in this korean v. the world attitude. white people arent some homogeneous unit either, but in general they have gotten over their regional differences and adopted a post-ethnic attitude. i speak italian at home, but have the respect for others never to speak it in front of them because they will not know what im talking about or if i'm talking about something relating to them behind your back. ive met my share of koreans in school, both americanized and foreign. i can tell you the foreign born koreans would laugh at you for asking this question. they are generally far less generalizing than folks such as yourself. there is not some korean love code. regardless of how intelligent you think you are, you have no common sense. or more accurately, you probably do, but are fishing for compliments here to convince you of what you already know--that being she likes you... for reasons i guess i couldnt understand. i once got with a korean girl who didnt speak a huge deal of english. at the last day of a class we were in she told me, "i really hope i see you again. im a glad to know you." she was so sincere i almost teared up right there. it made me respect her humility to hear her speak so plainly. it also took a lot of courage for her to approach an american guy, and it made me feel good about myself. this girl wants your bigotted "korean love code BS"-believing ***, and she has already let you know. man up.

What does a girl call a younger guy in korean?

I've heard guys calling older girls, nuna....
I've heard guys calling older guys, hyung...
I've heard girls calling older guys, Oppa...
I've heard girls calling older girls, Unni..
but what do girl's call girls and guys if they are younger then them?
also what do guy's call girls and guys that are younger then them?

In Korean, how do you say "brother"?

If you’re a guyOlder Brother - “Hyung” /HyeongYounger Brother - Namdongsaeng (but you don’t usually say that when you want to call him)If you’re a gitlOlder Brother - Noona/NunaYounger Brother - Nam Dongsaeng

How do Korean guys feel about non-Korean girls calling them "Oppa"?

I admit… I like it! To me this tells me this girl is in tune with Korean culture. She’s down for drinking soju, eating kimchi & san-nakji, and singing at the noraebang all night long. Maybe she’ll even partake in Haejang-guk in the morning with me to wash out the hangover? I love it! I could care less about the “aegyo” voice.Sidestory to this… My family immigrated to the US during the 70s… Probably the first official wave of Korean immigrants (they started up the Koreatowns in the major cities). The Korean girls I grew up with were Americanized to the core and would never call older Korean boys, “Oppa.” In fact, some girls I knew hated the Korean male species due to their strict Tiger dads (and moms) and would never associate with other Koreans. It wasn’t until my late 20s when I first visited Korea. That visit turned my life 180 degrees. Younger girls called me “Oppa.” I called older buddies, “Hyung.” Older girls I referred to as, “Nuna.” It was a mutual sign of cultural & social respect to me. Anyway…My wife and I are in our 40s and she still calls me “Oppa.” It gives me a warm tingle inside. :-)

How to say female and male in korean?

남성 is "namseong" and means "male gender". 여성 is "yeoseong" and means "female gender".

남자 is "namja" and means "man". 여자 is "yeoja" and means "woman".

If you want the adjectives, there are several answers but nam = male (adj) and yeo = femail (adj) in many compound words.

The person with the user name "나는 한국을 사랑한다!" might be Korean, but she's made a several mistakes, and this makes me strongly suspect that she neither reads nor knows Korean. For "female" she wrote "여성" and gave "yeo-ja" as the transliteration. However, the word she wrote in hangul is "yeoseong". And for male, she wrote "말레 (nam-ja)", but the word she wrote in hangul is, in fact, "mallae". This does NOT mean "male" but is the Korean word for the island Malé. All these really silly errors together make me suspect that this user is making untrue claims about her knowledge of even very basic Korean.

If you want the nouns, namja = man, yeoja = woman. If you want the adjective, there are several answers but nam = male (adj) and yeo = femail (adj) in many compound words.

나는 한국을 사랑한다! might be Korean but she's made a several mistakes. For female she wrote 여성 and gave "yeo-ja" as the transliteration. However, the word she wrote in hangul is "yeoseong".

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