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#culture

Browse Korean learning posts tagged "Culture". Slang, grammar, culture, and real-world examples to sharpen your Korean.

11 posts
What Does Korean Money Look Like? Won Coins, Bills, and Who's on Them
blogcultureen

What Does Korean Money Look Like? Won Coins, Bills, and Who's on Them

South Korean money is the won, printed in four banknote denominations β€” 1,000, 5,000, 10,000, and 50,000 won β€” featuring Joseon-era scholars and one queen. Four coin denominations (10, 50, 100, 500) round out everyday cash.

Read β†’4/17/2026
What Does Korean Melon Taste Like? A Sweet, Light Summer Fruit
blogcultureen

What Does Korean Melon Taste Like? A Sweet, Light Summer Fruit

Korean melon (chamoe) tastes lightly sweet with a cool, cucumber-like freshness and a faintly floral note. This guide covers the flavor, the texture, how Koreans eat it, and the vocabulary you need to ask for one at a market.

Read β†’4/17/2026
What Does Korean Ginseng Do? Traditional Uses and Modern Products
blogcultureen

What Does Korean Ginseng Do? Traditional Uses and Modern Products

Korean ginseng is commonly sold as an energy and wellness tonic, traditionally used to support stamina and recovery. This guide explains the different forms (fresh, white, red), how Koreans typically use them, and the vocabulary you'll see on product labels.

Read β†’4/17/2026
What Does Korean BBQ Taste Like? Flavors, Sides, and What to Order
blogcultureen

What Does Korean BBQ Taste Like? Flavors, Sides, and What to Order

Korean BBQ tastes savory, slightly sweet, and deeply smoky, with meat seasoned in soy, garlic, sugar, sesame, and pear. This guide walks through the core flavors, the side dishes (banchan) that balance the grill, and the key Korean words to know before you order.

Read β†’4/17/2026
What Does Korean Age Mean? The Old System vs. the 2023 Reform
blogcultureen

What Does Korean Age Mean? The Old System vs. the 2023 Reform

Korean age traditionally added one or two years to your international age because Koreans were born "one" and gained a year every New Year. A 2023 law unified official records around international age, but social speech often still uses the old counts.

Read β†’4/17/2026
Korean Honorifics Explained: Speech Levels, Suffixes, and Titles
bloggrammaren

Korean Honorifics Explained: Speech Levels, Suffixes, and Titles

Korean honorifics are less a grammar rule and more a social reflex. You're reading the room β€” who's older, who's your boss, who's a stranger β€” and adjusting your verbs. Here's the practical version, starting with one sentence that shows every layer at once.

Read β†’4/17/2026
Korean Food in Koreatown: What to Order on Your First Visit
blogcultureen

Korean Food in Koreatown: What to Order on Your First Visit

Koreatown LA is where I learned most of what I know about Korean food outside of Korea. The portions are bigger, the spice is dialed back, and half the menu is fusion you won't see in Seoul. Here's the order rotation I send friends through on their first visit, plus what makes Koreatown different from Korea.

Read β†’4/17/2026
Korean Food at Korean Restaurants: A First-Timer's Order Guide
blogcultureen

Korean Food at Korean Restaurants: A First-Timer's Order Guide

Walking into a Korean sit-down restaurant without a Korean friend is disorienting the first time. Side dishes arrive before you order. The menu has three categories you don't recognize. Here's what I wish someone had told me β€” what to point at, what to actually order, and the phrase that saved me.

Read β†’4/17/2026
Korean BBQ vs. Korean Fried Chicken: The Two Menus Americans Love
blogcultureen

Korean BBQ vs. Korean Fried Chicken: The Two Menus Americans Love

Korean BBQ and Korean fried chicken are the two Korean meals most likely to show up on an American dinner table. They solve opposite problems β€” BBQ is slow and communal, chicken is fast delivery and beer. Here's the real difference, plus what to order at each.

Read β†’4/17/2026
K-Drama Korean Words: 20 You'll Hear in Every Series
blogvocabularyen

K-Drama Korean Words: 20 You'll Hear in Every Series

K-dramas recycle a surprisingly small set of emotional words β€” love, wait, heart, promise, miss, believe. Once you catch those 20 by ear, subtitles start feeling like a backup instead of a crutch. Here's the list, plus which drama scenes you'll actually hear each one in.

Read β†’4/17/2026
Does Korea Use Honorifics? Yes β€” Far More Than English Does
bloggrammaren

Does Korea Use Honorifics? Yes β€” Far More Than English Does

Yes β€” Korea runs on honorifics, way more than English does. They're baked into verbs, titles, and even which word you pick for "eat" or "sleep." Here's where they show up day to day, and what happens when you skip them (spoiler, I've done it).

Read β†’4/17/2026

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