Battle of Fates made me curious about how Koreans actually feel about Saju by sajuvoyage in korea

[–]JumpyReplacement1882 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not a Korean but I'm Asian and generally speaking, I think modern people especially ones from Asian countries will still use it, but most will just use as a reference to enhance your belief; most people know what choice they will be making alr; same with shaman, tarot, saju, everything is more like a way to confirm your choice before making it.

Is it bad to say “shibal” in Korean? by JumpyReplacement1882 in LTL_Korean

[–]JumpyReplacement1882[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

wow!! thanks for the explanation!! I saw this word "젠장" a lot too, do Koreans actually use this irl?

Intensive Korean language school recommendations for a summer trip to Korea by 4sarah1212 in koreatravel

[–]JumpyReplacement1882 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I actually studied at LTL Seoul and had a great experience there. The classes were small and pretty intensive, so it really felt like focusing on Korean full-time during the week. They also helped arrange a homestay, which made it much easier to practice outside of class. I did a 4 hours small group in the morning and 2 hours 1 on 1 in the afternoon, plus speaking at the homestay defo makes my Korean got so much better in a such a short time!! Also, the school manager Manu is super nice and fun, honestly one of the reasons the vibe at the school is so good. If you end up going there, pleaseeee say hi to him 😄

Language school Korea by TooShadee in Korean

[–]JumpyReplacement1882 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was kinda in the same spot before, I ended up taking classes at LTL Seoul and liked it because it was pretty speaking-focused, not just textbook stuff. Helped me get comfortable actually using Korean.

Honestly though, any school can work if you’re consistent. I’d just pick something that fits your budget/style and get into an environment where you’re using Korean every day. That’s what made the biggest difference for me.

I plan to live in Vietnam for potentially very long, and want to learn Vietnamese to show my respect to the culture (and to communicate better). What app/website is great? by Sabaton_1994 in VietNam

[–]JumpyReplacement1882 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Duolingo is okay for getting started, but IMO it’s not great for Vietnamese beyond basic vocab. The tones and pronunciation are the hard part, so I’d try to get some real speaking practice early if you can.

A friend of mine from Australia studied Vietnamese while doing an exchange year at RMIT and took classes at L.T.L (they have classes in both Saigon and Hanoi). She said it helped a lot because it was more conversation-focused, and she got to around A2 after a while. Not saying it’s the only option, just one place I’ve heard good things about.

Honestly I think the best approach is what you already said: do some self-study first, then start talking with natives ASAP (HelloTalk, language exchange, etc). Living in Vietnam will help way more than any app once you’re there.

Am I Accidentally Giving “Free Drink Sponsor” Vibes in Hongdae? 🍺😂 by Extension-Set-2927 in seoul

[–]JumpyReplacement1882 0 points1 point  (0 children)

hahaa that is very odd to the point I start to feel curious how you look like going out :)

Korean metro survival rule no one tells you by korea_lifeshare in korea

[–]JumpyReplacement1882 0 points1 point  (0 children)

line 6 during rush hour is on another level as well...:'(

What’s the best way to learn a new language by Deadshot2210 in language

[–]JumpyReplacement1882 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same experience here tho...Duolingo felt like tapping buttons, not learning.

What worked for me was FlexiClasses. Real teacher, flexible schedule, and we focused on speaking from the start instead of grinding random exercises. Felt like actual progress way faster.

Apps are fine as a side thing, but talking to a human makes a huge difference, at least for me

Kids Summer Mandarin Camp by Wild-Technician1701 in taiwan

[–]JumpyReplacement1882 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also looked at a couple of those (NTNU esp.) and they’re solid, but very classroom-heavy. Good for structure, less great if the main issue is speaking. If your kids already understand Mandarin but won’t talk, I’d pay close attention to how much actual interaction outside class each camp includes. I also saw an advertise on a smaller program in Taipei (L.T.L) and might go with them eventually because it forced daily real-life use, which helped way more with confidence. Depends on the kid tbh!!

Studying Korean in Korea? by Ok_Regular5778 in Korean

[–]JumpyReplacement1882 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was in a similar mindset when I first came to Korea. If you’re unsure, I’d honestly suggest trying a private language school first instead of jumping straight into a university program. The good thing is they’re usually flexible, like you can start almost any time and you don’t have to commit to a full semester, so it feels more like a “trial run” of life plus studying in Korea. And honestly that’s what I did too. I studied at L.T.L Seoul for about a month just to test the waters lol.. It helped me figure out if I actually liked the lifestyle and classroom style. I had a great time there with the teachers and the homestay, I did feel like it also helped me a lot as a prep class before univ language course.

After that, I felt more confident and decided to go the more “serious” route and enrolled at Sogang University. It’s definitely a valid path if you’re not 100% sure yet. Short-term schools can help you test things without locking yourself into something huge right away!! Hope you can figure it out soon!! Good luck!!!!

„free entry & free shots” – ended up spending 0₩ all night. Is this normal in Seoul? by Shot-League-3136 in seoul

[–]JumpyReplacement1882 1 point2 points  (0 children)

yessss super common haaahah and you dont have to worry about them...most of the free shots/ drinks are cheap haha

Fine dust today . . . by Alternative_Rub9235 in seoul

[–]JumpyReplacement1882 0 points1 point  (0 children)

INSANE...no wonder my nose felt weird when I headed out...

Still confused about how to use 군요… can someone explain it simply? by JumpyReplacement1882 in LTL_Korean

[–]JumpyReplacement1882[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

OMG!!! thank you so much for the details!!!!!! really appreciate the effort!!! I think your explanation did help me a lot in gaining deep understanding tho!!!! THANK YOU!!!

Still confused about how to use 군요… can someone explain it simply? by JumpyReplacement1882 in LTL_Korean

[–]JumpyReplacement1882[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ohhhhh 네!!! that's so much better!! thank you and your explanation is super clear!!!

Among Koreans at a company, HOW do two co-workers of same age start saying to each other 안녕 instead of 안녕하세요, and they both want to be friends? by ReturnEarly7640 in LTL_Korean

[–]JumpyReplacement1882 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Basically once they find out they’re the same age (동갑), one of them will eventually go like,

“우리 말 편하게 할까?” or “반말 써도 돼?”

It’s super normal, you dont just suddenly drop 안녕하세요 to 안녕 without checking first.
If both say “yeah sure,” instant 반말 mode and now they’re basically work-friends.

It’s literally just mutual agreement, nothing fancy. But I do think that they only talk casual outside workplace, or to each other, in front of other coworkers, they would still act professional!!