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#sogang
Tsukauchi: If you like vigilantism, let me hear you say “hell yeah!”
Koichi & squad: Hell yeah!
Tsukauchi: Gocha. *sirens go off* Let’s get these motherfuckers. 
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bieups · 2 years
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How good is your Korean after Sogang Level 1?
Since I finished my lesson posts for level 1, I’d thought I’d share the final reading passage from the level 1 textbook (1B Unit 8 읽기, page 147)! This passage doesn’t use every grammar point covered in the level, but it does give a pretty good example of something you should be able to understand when you finish the level.
Also, there are a couple patterns that actually aren’t main grammar points in level 1! Textbooks are good at introducing new language before/without focusing on it, so your brain has a chance to do some inductive learning~ (And obviously in a classroom setting, your teacher would be able to quickly explain things.) Posts on ~지만 & ~을 때 are on my to-do list, N 후에 is mentioned in my upcoming lesson post :)
(Ignore the highlights, this photo is straight from my actual textbook ㅋㅋ)
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[I’m not adding alt text right now but I may come back to it later…it’s a whole page of 앤디 씨의 한국 생활 소개]
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yenadata · 7 months
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[230927] damdahey insta update with Yena
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gotta-get-smart · 1 year
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Day 20/100 of productivity
With Christmas behind me it's time to get back into reviewing vocab and grammar. I got myself a bed/lap table so I can sit cozy in bed while doing uni work and it's 10/10.
I am waiting for four more grades and when those are known I can finally truly breathe freely. I am truly only worried about my premodern history exam grade and not at all about the others. I still need my culture essay and exam grade and a grade for a small assignment for our Area Studies course. Once we know we passed our first semester courses we're going to put in the reservation for our apartment in Seoul!
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wwwhanako · 10 months
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˚₊· ͟͟͞͞ History 彡
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The Minatozakis moved to South Korea when Hanako was 12 years old. She attended Sogang University and had a tutor to teach her Korean, but she refused, claiming she didn't need one.
Hanako has always loved singing since she was a child. Her mother encouraged her to participate in recitals and eventually got her a singing coach because her mother always said that was her future.
Hanako was the last member to join BTS; she auditioned for BIGHIT's girl group but things fell through and no one informed Hanako. She knew she was joining another group at the last minute, but she was surprised to find 7 boys inside the room, along with PD-min. She wanted to leave, but Jungkook begged her to stay, saying all her hard work would be for nothing.
She signed a contract for two albums before leaving, which was unusual for a girl in a boyband. Jin was the first member she became close to; he welcomed her with open arms because he didn't want her to feel like the odd one out in the group. She didn't speak Korean well, so he asked PD-min to find her a tutor. She finally listened because she needed it for her career.
After a long discussion with Hoseok and Namjoon, she finally decided to stay in Bangtan during the recording of their second album.
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@wwwhanako do not steal, translate or re-edit my work. This is the only platform I am on, no wattpad or ao3
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akmu-is-love · 5 months
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230922 | Sogang University Festival Cardinal | cr: lilnyeong
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koreaguides · 1 year
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Major Universities In Korea
1. Seoul National University
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Address: 1 Gwanak-ro, Gwanak-gu, Seoul, 08826 
2. KAIST 
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Address: 291 Daehak-ro, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, 34141
3. Korea University 
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Address: 145 Anam-ro, Seongbuk-ku, Seoul, 02841 
4. Yonsei University 
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Address: 50 Yonsei-ro, Seodaemun-gu, Seoul, 03722
5. Hanyang University 
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Address: 222 Wangsimni-ro, Seongdong-gu, Seoul, 04763 
6. Sogang University 
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Address: 35 Baekbeom-ro, Mapo-gu, Seoul, 04107 
7. Sungkyunkwan University 
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Address: 25-2 Sungkyunkwan-ro, Jongno-gu, Seoul, 03063 
8. Kyunghee University 
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Address: 26, Kyungheedae-ro, Dongdaemun-gu, Seoul, 02447 
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carolynsstudies · 2 years
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Hey!! While studying abroad in Seoul, South Korea, I was enrolled at Sogang University where I did the KAP200 course. This course was for learning Korean for Academic Purposes and was four hours a day, five days a week. Sogang’s language program is heavily speaking focused to allow for quick progression while immersed in the country. While I learned a lot in the classroom, I feel I was able to fully learn how to live abroad through my experiences outside of the classroom. There were a lot a phrases I had to learn to make everyday life in Korea easier. But to begin if you aren’t totally sure how to make sentences yet in Korean, here are a few of the most important words I found while shopping/eating abroad!
1. 안녕하세요! 
   (an-nyeong-ha-se-yo): Hello!
2. 봉투
    (bong-tu): bag
    *Used during transactions. Listen to this word and if needed, respond 네 (ne): yes /아니요 (a-ni-yo): no
3. 영수증 🧾 
    (yeong-su-jeung): receipt 
    *Used during transactions. Listen to this word and if needed, respond 네 (ne): yes /아니요 (a-ni-yo): no
4. 카드 💳 / 현금 💵 
    (ka-deu/ hyeon-geum): card/cash
5. 이거 주세요.
    (ee-geo ju-se-yo): This one please. 
    *Used while pointing to item 
6. 이거 얼마예요?
    (ee-geo eol-ma-ye-yo): How much is this?
    *Used while pointing to item 
7. 저기요 👋!
   (jeo-gi-yo): Excuse me!
   *Used for getting someone’s attention at restaurant to order food (unlike in America, restaurant staff will not be lingering at your table while you wait to order, you have to get their attention). 
8. 화장실 🚻 어디에 있어요?
   (hwa-jang-sil eo-di-e ee-sseo-yo): Where is the bathroom?
9. ______ 주세요.
   (______ ju-se-yo): Please give me ______.
   *Used when ordering food or asking for a specific item while shopping.
10. 티머니 충전해주세요.
     (ti-meo-ni choong-jeon-hae-ju-se-yo): I would like to recharge my T-Money card.
    *T-Money cards are the most used way for paying for public transportation in Korea. You are able to top them off with cash only at most convenience stores and at the kiosk in the entrances of most subway stations.
11. 감사합니다. 
      (kam-sa-hab-ni-da): Thank you!
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hollyhomburg · 2 years
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waaaaaait, you studied at sogang!? gosh, what a weird coincidence. i am studying there through an exchange program run by my american university and was planning on taking a course similar to the one you mentioned! i'm a little nervous about going to korea just because i only started studying korean a few months ago and i'm a slow learner and i'm pretty anxious about not being able to communicate with people and, like, i know this is irrational, but somehow offending someone through my own cultural ineptitude. do you have any tips about studying abroad? or would you mind if i pestered you with questions via dm?
okay i'll give you my tips via a bulleted list! but i do have one favor to ask of you in exchange!
Sogang university and korean universities in general have a much more substantial curve than American universities generally have, don't worry too well about doing super super well, i had a 50 on a final and i still passed with a C+ (this was a math course.)
Sogang is primarily a business school- so expect any business and math classes to be harder than others.
i did not know a lick of korean when i landed in Korea, I'm talking i did not even know how to say thank you properly- so any effort that you are taking to learn the language before you get there is going to put you a step above others. don’t worry- you’re doing fine.
but- i would put a great emphasis on ordering food and learning how to read korean over super spesific grammer things because knowing how to read korean is actually really helpful because not all menues in korea are written in english, most subway stations and street signs are though, this includes numbers too.
learn how to be polite, take things with two hands always or hold your elbow if you can't. People don't hold open doors for each other in korea, it's strange but people will look at your weird if you do but it's also strangely rendering.
this is a little uncomfortable to say but- English sounds very loud compared to Korean to korean people.  it's literally just harder to talk in hushed tones when you're speaking English since korean is naturally an octive lower in tone;  be mindful of not talking too loud when you're in a shared space. even if you talk at normal volume people will consider it rude, its just another cultural difference. 
People will complain if you talk too loud in the hallways, the cafeteria, or study rooms even if they are not in the same room as you. im talking if they are down the hall and they can hear even a whisper from you- they will complain- even if there are korean people around you being louder than you. free space is very very hard to come-by in general. there are study rooms that you can book though in the basements of alot of buildings at sogang and those are really helpful and sound proof.
The same is true with trains and busses and restaurants and coffee shops. i even had people complain that we were talking too loud in a bar at one point. It's just how English is perceived in korea because of the american military men and don't feel like you can't exist in certain spaces just because you do speak English or are going to be speaking English. 
speaking of the american military men, stay away from them. they aren’t good people and they don’t treat anyone (korean or otherwise) with respect, they hang around itaewon alot and there are plenty of fun bars that aren’t in that part of seoul.
Do your best to sign up for everything the buddy program at sogang offers- they are alot of fun and you get to know alot about how things are laid out in seoul especially at the begining.
if you are planning on going anywhere at night or early morning, Know if where you're going has cctv, most if not all parks in korea are really well monitored as are train stations. most places like itaewon, hongdae, and sinchon and ewha have them so you'll be safe no matter what but there are a few places like certian parts of mapo that are a little less safe, but if you've been to nyc- the most dangerous parts of korea are still safer than many parts of brooklyn in my opinion.
there is nothing that you have at home that you can't get in korea besides hair dye for thin hair and sour cream. when i left i packed a whole bunch of stuff like shaving razors and pads and full sized towels because people told me they wouldn’t be there- but yeah- you're going to be able to find those in any freaking lottemart practically. alot of information is outdated online.
also- if you wanna see lots and lots of stray cats walk the Gyeongui Line Forest Park, its really close to sogang and the quickest way to walk to hongdae (in my opinion)
now as for my favor, when you are heading outside of gonzaga dorm (the dorm that all exchange students have to stay in 90% of the time, so i’m assuming you’ll live there) you go down the hill in the direction of both ewha womans station, and then exactly across from the cross walk before you walk towards the river and daeheung station, there is a paris baguette and a coffee shop called ‘please coffee’. i’d like a picture of that coffee shop, and if you go into it- get the caramel macchiato. 
Thats the coffee shop that my soulmate and i met in and i wonder almost every day if it closed during the pandemic or if it’s still there. when i go back to seoul for teaching im gonna track it down but yeah, part of me wants to know if it’s there or just in our memories now
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rina-studies-ir · 3 months
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After receiving a decent grade for a recent essay, I have decided that my aims for this term are to:
Continue achieving good grades
(Maybe- depending on what my professors think) Try my utmost best to get into Seoul National University for my exchange year. I think this is possible because people want to avoid the screening test and most people don't want to apply/ would prefer KU or Sogang/ others instead.
I mean might get terrible grades for the essays I just submitted but we'll wait and see :')
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mykpopwire · 7 months
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media release: BLITZERS' first fan concert in Korea in October, online streaming available for global fans
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BLITZERS will be having their first fan concert “A to z” in KOREA!
On September 27th, BLITZERS announced the news that they will be holding their first fan concert in Korea, "A to z”, through their official social media. The poster that was released, along with the news of the performance, has an eye-catching vintage design that resembles a paper cutout of the members of BLITZERS surrounded by letters of the alphabet. Dressed in casual styling and flashy colors that create a hip environment that highlights each members’ individual personality, global fans are excited upon hearing the news.
On August 2nd, BLITZERS met the local fans of Tokyo, Japan, for the [2023 BLITZERS FAN-CON in JAPAN ’SUMMER STORY’] and they expect to meet and greet the fans more closely for their upcoming fan concert “A to z”.
As BLITZERS are loved in the global market beyond Korea, this fan concert will be streaming live for the enjoyment of fans around the world who will not be able to attend.
Through powerful performances and special events, BLITZERS are expected to create special memories for their fans through “A to z”.
BLITZERS, established their presence as "special rookies” with their first U.S. tour last year and further expanded their global rise through their subsequent European tour. In April 2023 they achieved a “hot dance syndrome” by making people around the world dance with her second single, "Macarena," successfully completing their first solo Japanese tour in Tokyo and Osaka for about two months from July.
BLITZERS’ first fan concert in Korea, "A to z," will be held at Mary Hall Grand Theater at Sogang University on October 28th, 2023.
Tickets will be available on Melon Ticket.
*photo courtesy of Wuzo Entertainment
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Rapt: Is masturbating while smoking weed called masturblazing?
Koichi: No, it's called highjacking.
Moyuru: No, guys, it's called weedwacking.
Soga: No, it's called disappointing your mother.
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bieups · 1 year
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Throwback Thursday ft. this random notebook I found of level 5 notes~ These pages must've been from the chapter that covers Korean history.
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I can't say my handwriting has improved, but I think my 한글 is still better than my English...
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yenadata · 7 months
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© Gblover | preview
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kaomigee · 8 months
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Season 7, Episode 1: Kimberly McKee and Asian Adoptee Fetishization
Dr. Kimberly McKee, 39, currently a visiting Fulbright scholar at Sogang University in Seoul, Korea, is a critical adoption studies researcher. This November, her latest book, “Adoption Fantasies: Fetishization of Asian Adoptees from Girlhood to Womanhood” (The Ohio State University Press) will come out. We’ll talk about her latest monograph as well as her 2019 book, “Disrupting Kinship:…
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pink-factory · 10 months
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박유라 YURA PARK
Theater de vlugt
종이에 프린트, 액자, 10.5×14.8cm, 2023
삼일로 창고극장 Samilro Theatre
종이에 프린트, 액자, 25×20cm, 10.5×14.8cm, 2023
서강대학교 메리홀 Sogang University Maryhall
종이에 프린트, 액자, 21×29.7cm, 2023
아트선재센터 Art Sonje Center
종이에 프린트, 액자, 25×20cm, 2023
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