gotcha day n.— «Every year, besides her February birthday, we celebrate “gotcha day,” the day in June she came to us, when I get her something from the Korean culture.» —“South Korea Slows Export of Babies for...
dika n.— «For example, the English term “digital camera” is called “dika” (pronounced dee-ka) in South Korea.» —“North and South divided by common Korean language” by Jon Herskovitz in Seoul...
dika
n.— «Every kid in Korea has a mobile phone with a “dika” [digital camera].» —“Korean Bloggers” by dda Joe Ito’s Web June 2, 2005. (source: Double-Tongued Dictionary)
arbiter n.— «When I insist to the restaurant part-time waitresses, or “arbiters,” a Korean term borrowed from German, that I want nothing less than the very hottest variety of tak-galbi, they give me a look of disbelief...
mecenat n.— «The Korean Business Council for the Arts, a private nonprofit group founded in 1994 to foster relationships between businesses and the arts communities, conducted a survey of 500 domestic companies and cultural foundations to...
Globish n.— «They don’t know it, but the Korean and the Colombian are speaking Globish, the latest addition to the 6,800 languages that are said to be spoken across the world. Not that its inventor, Jean-Paul Nerrière, considers it a...