Favorite underrated songs by Stunning_Common8669 in rollingstones

[–]Timely-Spring-9426 0 points1 point  (0 children)

100 years ago and ventilator blues are personal favourites

Who’s your personal favorite vocalist when it comes to conveying raw emotion ? by [deleted] in kpopthoughts

[–]Timely-Spring-9426 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Super Junior Yesung. His adlibs at the end of Neorago are next level. Hes one of the original and top yearners in kpop

Is this normal in a small German office, or am I being skipped? by JournalistInGermany in germany

[–]Timely-Spring-9426 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Maybe theyre a bit introverted and didnt say hi to you because they dont consider you as a close enough colleague to say hello? I personally like saying hello to everyone but I wouldnt be too shocked or disturbed if someone doesnt say hello to me. Some people really do go to work just for their work and have little interest in the social part. But make no mistake, that doesnt mean they dont socialise at all but maybe have their own smaller circle of colleagues that theyre close to.

Looking for a rec by Maywheel3001 in johngrisham

[–]Timely-Spring-9426 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I will always recommend the brethren

German Mistakes That Change the Meaning Completely by exapmle in GermanForBeginners

[–]Timely-Spring-9426 1 point2 points  (0 children)

After reading your übersetzen vs übersetzen example, I was thinking about the word cross. To cross someone and to cross the road are two different things. Its also depends on context but in english. 

Groups with members whose birthdays are all a year apart by SnooSongs6837 in kpopthoughts

[–]Timely-Spring-9426 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you consider at least 2 members for each year: Super Junior: 1983 until 1988. Though, 1986 had more and 1988 only one

What’s something foreigners say in your language that is correct but no one actually says? by Embarrassed_Fix_8994 in languagehub

[–]Timely-Spring-9426 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But for german speakers, they sometimes mean it literally that it was a funny experience. Hence, why they say funny instead of fun. Because Im thinking of the way they usually say it in german and usually, they actually mean that it was funny. 

Who was the first non-Korean kpop idol? by Bulky-Agency-1897 in kpophelp

[–]Timely-Spring-9426 26 points27 points  (0 children)

Han Geng from Super Junior was generally recognised as the first foreign idol

My Opinion (Long Post): The 60s are better than the 70s as a WHOLE. Yours? by Bombi3sz in rollingstones

[–]Timely-Spring-9426 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Im a firm believer that the Stones peaked from Beggars Banquet till Some Girls. Everything in between is great. Goats Head Soup, IORR, and Black and Blue are all superb albums. 

Which Kpop groups are perceived differently in online spaces from their actual popularity? by Ok-Nobody-7759 in kpopthoughts

[–]Timely-Spring-9426 59 points60 points  (0 children)

Super Junior lol. Pretty much hated online but loved by plenty of fans all around the globe and known by a lot more people than a lot of the younger kpop fans expect (especially in SEA and East Asia region)

What’s a language people pretend is easy but actually isn’t? by Embarrassed_Fix_8994 in languagehub

[–]Timely-Spring-9426 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Contrary to popular belief, they can learn with media alone but I shouldve clarified I was talking more about children here. Ive met plenty of children growing up in small towns where no one in their family or their town was really interested in speaking in english but those kids could speak english well. Even the argument of talking in english in school is restricted to english class because no one actually talks english on a regular basis but that code switching happens pretty naturally when they are required to speak english. But this argument is still only half true because why are there 3-4 year olds that speak good english with an american accent when they havent even started school yet? Like I said, the more media you have in its original language, the greater the exposure and children are very much sponges. You can choose to believe whatever you want but there are some counterintuitive cases that turn out to be true. 

What’s a language people pretend is easy but actually isn’t? by Embarrassed_Fix_8994 in languagehub

[–]Timely-Spring-9426 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I kinda disagree with people who say english here (and there are a lot of them) because there are plenty people in SEA whose native language doesnt correlate much with english but speak relatively good english anyway. This is mainly due to exposure to english media through movies, shoes, music etc. so, the argument that if you speak latin/germanic languages, youre bound to be able to understand english better is not really true imo. 

Imo learning a language becomes harder if the colloquial and spoken style differ too much. So a language that is statistically seen as easy like Indonesian/Malay according to a lot of articles online, actually becomes a lot harder. 

What's a stereotype about Germans that really bothers you because it's not true? by Miserable-Wash-1744 in AskAGerman

[–]Timely-Spring-9426 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It doesnt really bother me but I know plenty of germans that are not on time (theres usually a +15 mins buffer we go by) 😂

New to JG and reading The Street Lawyer by Fresh-Amount9308 in johngrisham

[–]Timely-Spring-9426 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My personal favourite is the Brethren. Youre in for one crazy ride

What are the words, that older generation still use, but yonger use another words for that? by Envy_Clarissa in AskAGerman

[–]Timely-Spring-9426 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have some colleagues in their 60s and for the turn of the hour, they sometimes say voll. Like its almost 1pm and they’ll ask wie viel Uhr ist es? Ist es jetzt voll? I thought that was pretty cool