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@SumayaUthman-fd6gu Жыл бұрын
Ooh yaa. Asante😊😊
@Joey-py1sx Жыл бұрын
If you can't speak Korean you can get help from an agent.
@gos9922 Жыл бұрын
I've recently come back from 2 weeks in Seoul and Busan and I've studied Korean before so I know basics. I was surprised at how many locals speak English, often when I tried to speak Korean they would reply to me in English. And it wasn't just very young people. So I'd say it's easier to get around without knowing Korean than you might think.
@linnysheff Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the video! My take on this: you NEED to know at least the basics to get by as a tourist. And, if you wanna stay long term - learn the language of the country you’re in!
@Iki_cat11 Жыл бұрын
I traveled as a tourist this year with zero Korean and in big cities like Seoul and Busan you can definitely manage. It’s not easy if you need more complex things or if you want to have a conversation but otherwise just with signs and a humble bow I could manage easily in the market, pharmacy, cafes, etc. Many bus and metro stations are written in English also. If you want to stay long term definitely mandatory to learn.
@sayyanhmuong737 Жыл бұрын
Facts
@ryanasksaround Жыл бұрын
traveling to Seoul you really only need Hello, thank you, how much, numbers 1-10, and where is it. That will get you through a vacation here no question
@VilmaMks Жыл бұрын
If you're gonna travel to a country for maybe a couple weeks and you're only trying to enjoy the experience I bet it's fine if you just know "the basics" which would be being able to order food, book a reservation for a hotel or a restaurant, going shopping for souvenirs, and ask people for help if you need it, but if you're planning to live there, knowing the language it has to be a must... Otherwise the only way to live comfortably it would be if you surround yourself of other foreigners who speak the same language as you...
@jw841 Жыл бұрын
I agree with you however I've met people in Korea that have been there for years and only know the very basics. Yet it has not impeded their lives at all and they seem to get by just fine without been able to speak it. A buddy of mine speaks almost no Korean but has tons of Korean friends and a korean girlfriend. So as I agree it would be better to speak it there is also a fair amount of people that get by just fine without it.
@chacmool25817 ай бұрын
I am bicycling touring in South Korea, in the Deep South, in South Jeolla. I know not a lick of Korean. Is it possible to travel with no Korean? Yes
@SumayaUthman-fd6gu Жыл бұрын
I love this language, its accent is really cool!😊😊
@RobAllbanks Жыл бұрын
This is awesome content bro, new connection here from Alabama USA!
@eio1971 Жыл бұрын
Business travel I stayed in Seoul and worked in Cheongju,Suwon, and Icheon. I learned basics from a book and coworkers. It helped during my stays there
@shineeverse Жыл бұрын
2:46 It made me so happy to see a Bahraini here!! Im technically not a Bahraini but I was raised and am living in Bahrain. It's so rare to hear the name "Bahrain" anywhere.
@ritchieb1612 Жыл бұрын
Another superb video.
@francoiselee9792 Жыл бұрын
I think it’s important to know a minimum basic language when you go to visit Korea. For my side I’m just came back from Korea last month. I’ve try to speak the basic words. Some young’s Korean people sometimes helps you on the street to find your way in English. But when you are with ajushi ajuma on the Korean countryside you have to struggle to speak a minimum Korean to make you understand by Korean people.
@glennextics Жыл бұрын
I love iTalki! I use it a lot to learn a lot of different languages like Korean, Japanese, and many more. In addition, I would also recommend learners to start taking Korean classes before traveling to Korea.
@3p.aphrodite457 Жыл бұрын
I have been in Korea since march of this year and i realized learning korean is MUST!!
@noelamparo81637 ай бұрын
thanks for this video. I have been living in Germany for 33 years. I spent several months in South Korea 34 years ago (before that, I lived for 2 years in Saudi Arabia, where I learned Arabic). In the last 33 years I've been speaking only German (day in day out - at school where I teach, to my German wife, and only English to our trilingual daughters). For three decades, I concentrated on improving my Castillian Spanish - enhancing it with Peruvian, advancing my knowledge of French (which I learned before German) and learning two more, continental Portuguese and, for the last 5 years, Swedish. Your video has inspired me "to put oil on my rusty" Korean. It is a language that has a beautiful sound and writing system. why shouldn't I (re)learn another Asian language being originally from another Asian country, like the Philippines, myself?
@ryanasksaround Жыл бұрын
If you are here as a tourist: just know hello and thank you, and some other basic phrases If you are living here: I'd recommend knowing how to at least say a handful of phrases and recognize 3-400+ vocab words. You learn here quickly, but being able to have a simple convo makes your life easier. I came here with barely the basics, and I think knowing a little more would have made my first 4-5 months here better.
@jyd1384 Жыл бұрын
Even a few Korean elder citizens can speak English, of course, they are not fluent. Thus, foreign visitors may not have some communication problems if they can speak English, generally speaking. It means that if they can find some talking opponents as younger Korean people on a trip, many of them won't face some communication trouble to understand. In the countryside, foreign travelers might face a harsh moment when they can't find English speakers easily. On the contrary, in Korean cities, English speakers are here and there, but in the countryside, should have Korean friends who can speak English. That's better for visitors.
@andrew2616 Жыл бұрын
It’s actually quite interesting that if you live in a country you should learn the language. Being from the US, there are so many people here that never bothered to learn English but are able to get by so its definitely a change in perspective from what they are saying.
@ckbrowne9243 Жыл бұрын
I'm in the process of learning for a trip. Thought I'm terrified to actually speak it. I think you should learn the basics for any country you are visiting that is not English. It's I think a bit arrogant to assume everyone speaks English.
@뽀짝-o2r8 ай бұрын
저 아제르바이잔 사람 영어랑 한국어 둘다 잘하시네!
@theofficialpeterkim Жыл бұрын
Good topic. My Korean sucks. I’m okay with listening but I can barely talk.
@KExplorer Жыл бұрын
With constant practice you’ll be able to speak fluently
@user-mr5yw7mx4g Жыл бұрын
우리에겐 번역기가 있잖아.ㅋ
@ayaanhxss9961 Жыл бұрын
You can with Papago! If you’re there for a short while loooool🎉
@Kwangdong-t7j Жыл бұрын
In Korea, it’s definitely better to learn the Korean language but it depends on where you are living? Like in cities with not many foreigners, the people are more accustomed to just speaking Korean.
@kb6993 Жыл бұрын
One insane thing is that none of the people interviewed are from English speaking countries. Yet they language they communicate in is English.
@paulwalther5237 Жыл бұрын
It's a subjective question. I remember visiting Korea for 3 days to renew my visa for Japan. I couldn't say anything besides hello and I couldn't read hangul at all. I really felt helpless at times and my Japanese wasn't great but I could have simple conversations and just being able to do that made me feel so much more comfortable in Japan. But you're not doomed by any means in Korea if you can't speak or read hangul. It's just going to be awkward and you need to give yourself more time to get lost en route to places etc. Not being able to speak or read stinks but I think it's something you can get used to. As long as you're there to spend money I think koreans will be happy to have you. If you only visit countries where you speak the language you'll miss out on a lot of great travel destinations.
@harindimanajmv Жыл бұрын
Great job brother .
@f19-x9k7 ай бұрын
nah if you're just visiting you don't need to know any Korean, just use the translator and you'll be fine. ps: this is my 3rd week here
@nontzmkhize8735 Жыл бұрын
I went to Korea on holiday for the first time this year and I knew that not a lot of people spoke English so I tried to learn a few basic sentences. Whenever I would watch videos such as these or on Tik Tok or IG,they would say,"Oh some people speak in English in Seoul. That was not my experience 😂.I was actually surprised at just how few people actually speak English. And people made it seem like it's quite common amongst young people.I met one person who spoke English the entire trip(my trip was 10 days long) and that was in Busan and it was a middle aged man. I guess I came in with a prejudice because in my country almost everyone speaks English even if it's their 2nd,3rd or even 4th language.And even if a random person on the street may not speak English FLUENTLY they can still understand English and stitch a sentence together to respond to you(most people can). I found that in South Korea,even the understanding of the language wasn't common. Maybe that's due to it being such a homogeneous country. But my trip was great regardless and Papago helped a lot. So I'd say if you're staying long term or are on holiday for a long time definitely know more than a few sentences. But Korean people aren't necessarily that into small talk either so you won't be striking up a casual conversation with the cashier(Which is the case where I come from). So don't put too much pressure on yourself.
@user-hs1dd4tc7t Жыл бұрын
This is the problem with the current Anglocentric world. The default expectation for a non-English speaking country especially an average East Asian not needing to speak with a foreigner ever in their daily lives to speak to English is such an ethnocentric and biased view of the multicultural, interconnected present world we live in . I'm not necessarily calling you out personally but the rest of the world has to realise how much the world revolves around the English language to the point where belittling other languages as a main mode of conversation for not speaking it is implicitly considered the norm. America may have been the super power that triggered this insane trend for acculturation since WW2 but now when so many countries are so prosperous and unique in their own way, this sentiment can be said to be very outdated at this point. TLDR: Many cultures, especially Asian ones need to have more pride and dignity for their own culture and language rather than trying to Westernise everything non-Western.
@nontzmkhize8735 Жыл бұрын
@@user-hs1dd4tc7t I agree and disagree. I agree that it's a strange standard to have for homogeneous countries and even given the diversity of the world as you put it. But I disagree in terms of diversity somewhat nullifying English because I come from a country which is ethnically,racially and culturally diverse and English is, for the most part,still quite common. For example,you could be in a friend group of 5 or more people and each person could speak a different native language so the language you would use within your friend group would be English. Because that's the language everyone has in common. Largely due to colonisation but also because my country encourages expanding your horizons beyond the borders of our country. Which,unfortunately,requires a grasp of the English language. So in that sense,I agree with how Anglocentric the world is. But again,the world is more than just my country. It's just an example of how diversity and English do not cancel each other out. Again, I'm speaking solely on what I have seen in MY country. Learning basic English is viewed as an important tool that "opens many doors". And even when immigrating,people in my country tend to move to English speaking nations. Primarily the UK, Australia,New Zealand etc). So there's that. But I hear what you're saying. Obviously Korea has a different history and different priorities and they're very patriotic so it will be different from where I'm from where people just want to move constantly 😂
@user-il8zw2sv6e Жыл бұрын
I had the same experience! Even the concierge at the hotel was quite bad at English. I was surprised. The person with the best English was an older man, maybe 70, on the subway. I'm thinking he probably worked abroad.
@oneandonlyetude8 ай бұрын
Never gets bored watching how the voices change when they speak another language.
@ECINADGIRL Жыл бұрын
I know nobody does an effort to learn my language when they visit my island
@tpazsuperstar868 Жыл бұрын
which is what?
@mightysavage459 Жыл бұрын
Ah... man... I wanted to know why the last guy moved to Korea. I wished you wojuld have asked that because not all are there for school.
@enderasu Жыл бұрын
Question is who wants to live in Korea?
@joonkim202 Жыл бұрын
It's like really hard listening to people like speaking and the only preposition adjective or adverb is like. Like they never went to school or like never read a book. Like we are soooo doomed.
@bruciestv Жыл бұрын
7:30 zdravím Slovensko 🇸🇰
@icelang Жыл бұрын
Whoever held the camera is shaky bro. Fire the cameraman. 😅
@KExplorer Жыл бұрын
Haha i know right
@ryanasksaround Жыл бұрын
@@KExplorer savage
@julminah. Жыл бұрын
Korea University🐯❤❤
@roxyglow9670 Жыл бұрын
yes you can.. just know some basic and that s it. 9 years living in Seul actually so not just travelling and i live perfectly fine
@이효민-w8h Жыл бұрын
But it is rude if you live fir that long and aren't fluent
@dksoulstice6040 Жыл бұрын
Is unwise. /end video
@Sanismom Жыл бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
@Javier99999 Жыл бұрын
5 years here and I still only know how to say thank you and hi. Koreans never speak to you unless you speak to them. So, you can just live here and chill and never learn the language and be completely fine. I've lived in 2 other countries and fluently learned their languages because everyday people were speaking to you. But, in Korea no one will ever talk to you, so it seems pointless. Even if I learned Korean there'd probably be no one to speak it to anyway. In the other countries I lived in, there's no "getting by" without their language. Which gave you no choice, you either learn or you learn. Don't worry, you're never going to "get in the culture" in Korea. You'll always be a foreigner to them.
@이효민-w8h Жыл бұрын
.. no its not hard to make korean friends you just don't put the effort... 5 years and not speaking korean is pathetic
@michaelrs8010 Жыл бұрын
Should have given the French girl a challenge to see if she could speak English without saying LIKE. 😄
@superboiboi007 Жыл бұрын
Hahaah so funny lol 😂 I noticed it too
@stevegfromnc34828 ай бұрын
A couple of the others, too. I think only the Slovakian and the Azerbaijani made it through without an inappropriate "like."
@eprohoda Жыл бұрын
K-How’s life?. wow. stunning !see ya,😯
@jollygoodgordon5580 Жыл бұрын
*too be honest its always cringe to me to hear foreigners trying to copy the american way of speaking english with a billion ''like'' per sentence.*
@Top-Kek Жыл бұрын
Other languages use "like" as a filler word as well.
@jollygoodgordon5580 Жыл бұрын
no not like americans😏😏@@Top-Kek
@ply155 Жыл бұрын
@@Top-KekExactly the Chinese use a word that sounds very much like the N word when they want to use a filler