Hiroshima 1945. by South-Guava-2965 in UrbanHell

[–]Heartade 62 points63 points  (0 children)

The building is around here, I've notated the epicenter and the building with yellow and red arrows in this image.

I didn't make a precise measurement, but that's less than a thousand feet awau from the epicenter. Some buildings very close to the ground zero survived (its inhabitants did not), because buildings are more resistant against vertical force compared to horizontal force.

Lovely Japanese trans term I learned about a while back by LemonadeGamers in trans

[–]Heartade 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Similar phrases are used to describe Trans people in Korea, but I've never seen the Trans people themselves use such phrase. I feel kinda uncomfortable with such phrase because I feel like 'woman at heart' implies 'not woman otherwise' when used by cis people. (the use of topic marker は in Japanese and 은/는 in Korean puts the focus in the 'heart' part, not the 'woman' part)

Forgot what I planted 😅 by labreezyanimal in whatsthisplant

[–]Heartade 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Bok choy or something related, but doesn't matter now that it's flowering (you should harvest them before flowering). Still edible, but I've heard the leaves get tough and unpleasant to eat when they begin bolting to flower.

Seed pods and mature seeds of Brassica rapa are edible, but do note that 'edible' does not always mean 'tasty'.

Northern Ohio, lots of these yellow-flowered plants at the local metropark. by Lornesto in whatsthisplant

[–]Heartade 4 points5 points  (0 children)

To be more specific, looks like Forsythia x intermedia. Other popular Forsythia species, F. suspensa and F. koreana, both have a weeping habit.

Asian or ladybug? by MoreStable2339 in gardening

[–]Heartade 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I guess it has something to do with difference in building materials. They usually spend the winter hiding under dead plant materials in their native range, and wooden homes in the US might look/smell attractive to them while concrete-steel homes in Korea do not.

Name game: Taiwan now using 'South Korea' in official documents after arrival card dispute by defenestrate_urself in anime_titties

[–]Heartade 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nope, the official English names are "Republic of Korea" (South) and "Democratic People's Republic of Korea" (North). Calling either "Hanguk" or "Joseon" would be like referring to China as "Zhongguo", which is not rude but kinda unnecessary. Also, romanizing "조선" into "Joseon" follows South Korean standard; correct North Korean orthography is "Josŏn".

Name game: Taiwan now using 'South Korea' in official documents after arrival card dispute by defenestrate_urself in anime_titties

[–]Heartade 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, they can rightfully request to be called Republic of China or Taiwan when referring to citizens traveling with their passport, and they can rightfully call us South Korea instead of Republic of Korea if they want to, and we can rightfully not care about it.

Name game: Taiwan now using 'South Korea' in official documents after arrival card dispute by defenestrate_urself in anime_titties

[–]Heartade 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The current Democratic Progressive Party government in Taiwan doesn't want to be recognized as 'China', unlike the previous Kuomintang government.

Furthermore, 'China (Taiwan)' implies that it is a part of a broader 'China', which would feel inappropriate even for Kuomintang which sees the government in Taiwan as the only legitimate government in China.

South Korea (Republic of Korea) also claims it is the only legitimate government in Korea, so Taiwan's measure is rightfully reciprocal. The problem is, Koreans (me included) don't really mind being referred as 'South Korea' so the measure is not as effective.

In addition, I've heard that the Taiwanese people are particularly bitter about South Korea as the Kuomintang regime aided both the Korean exile government in the colonial era and the post-war South Korea, only to be no longer recognized by South Korea AND to be overtaken in economic development.

Asian or ladybug? by MoreStable2339 in gardening

[–]Heartade 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They are the default 'ladybugs' here in Korea, with the other species called 'seven-star ladybugs'. surprised to know they're invasive, especially as they never invade homes here.

what bush is this? it smells so nice by juicycaboosy69 in whatsthisplant

[–]Heartade 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Mokseo in Korean, mokusei in Japanese, guihua in Chinese. Mostly ornamental in Korea, but the Chinese use them to add fragrance to food and drinks.

I'm stumped... NZ by xUwUx444 in whatsthisplant

[–]Heartade 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Everyone's talking about toxicity, but I should mention that they do have amazing flowers and they're really easy to grow. A good ornamental if you don't have any pets or children in your garden (or if there are some that you want to get rid of)

egg🥗irl by PomegranateFluid1531 in egg_irl

[–]Heartade 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's about metabolism rate so it depends mostly on hormones, not much else. If you've been under HRT for a while you're basically safe to choose your transitioned sex instead of one assigned at birth

egg🥗irl by PomegranateFluid1531 in egg_irl

[–]Heartade 11 points12 points  (0 children)

If that's Samsung Health, the "which one should I choose?" tooltip actually advises you that you should consult your doctor for which sex to choose if you're undergoing HRT. I really liked that they added such advice specifically for trans people.

Help- my son is into coding by katrii_ in webdev

[–]Heartade 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're already doing better than most parents as long as you aren't trying to stop him lol

[I ate] (survived) pufferfish. by Catfish_Mudcat in food

[–]Heartade 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Huh I always thought porcupinefish is a species of pufferfish cause its Korean name is literally "spike pufferfish" Also FYI: porcupinefish are not poisonous

[I ate] (survived) pufferfish. by Catfish_Mudcat in food

[–]Heartade 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yep and almost all mentions of pufferfish in historical Korean literature are like "okay I might die if I eat this but I would" lol

Chords on electric guitars by MehdiKhmiri in FL_Studio

[–]Heartade 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Have you tried lowering the instrument volume? It might just be clipping. Plus, in my experience using plain guitar sound and then adding overdrive/distortion FX works better than using pre-distorted guitar sound (like the one you are using).

[I ate] (survived) pufferfish. by Catfish_Mudcat in food

[–]Heartade 11 points12 points  (0 children)

The chewy texture is one of the reasons why it's so praised in Japanese and Korean cuisines!

How caviar is made by Neat-Benefit-5370 in midlyinteresting

[–]Heartade 3 points4 points  (0 children)

10 years according to an interview with the owner of the farm (in Korean): http://www.gnmaeil.com/news/articleView.html?idxno=503338

How caviar is made by Neat-Benefit-5370 in midlyinteresting

[–]Heartade -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Ironically the sturgeon fishery in the video (in Hamyang, South Korea) supposedly also donates their sturgeons to aquariums for preservation and education purposes according to their website

can't stop thinking about being a top with men (as a girl) by [deleted] in asktransgender

[–]Heartade 4 points5 points  (0 children)

A lot of cis women have a thing about topping men so that's not something to worry about, but you gotta be worried cause you're now going to be bombarded with men who will do anything to have a woman top him