not to be fake deep but gay culture is having a complicated, flawed relationship with the people who were supposed to be there for you. the blood relatives you refuse to come out to, the ones you regret being honest with, the ones who give you that sharp, knifeblade smile like they know they’re supposed to be fine with you being gay but fuck they’re upset about it
gay culture is finding a new family. rewriting the one that you lost. the sliding sideways glance of two people in a room “i got you”. replacing the bits of you that fell out and finding - oh, oh, this is what love was supposed to be, isn’t it, where i open my heart and the teeth don’t come out. where you can say “i need help” and a hand opens and not to take. a house, sometimes; more often just a series of shared spaces where cat-like you lounge with the weirdest people you’ve ever known, the most beautifully honest human beings who let you be weird too (they’re not actually weird, you realize one day, it’s just weird to you that they aren’t angry, and that idea makes you drop what you’re holding). no, we can’t talk honestly with our dads and don’t bother with our moms. we feel what is unsaid like a second person we carry with us, a hand over our mouths. it’s okay, and it’s not okay, and when it’s not okay, you say: i need a hug. and you get one, always.
한국어: 제가 발어크를 2015년에서 만들고 저는 한자핬어요. 친구들하고 여기에서 제 하고 싶었어요. 그리고 제가 더 좋고 싶었어요. 저는 그거 있어요? 아직 몰라요.
영어: I made my 블로그 in 2015 and I was lonely. I wanted friends and a place I could be me in. And I wanted a better me. Have I done that? I don’t know yet.
Hoseok is the star player for South Korea’s national soccer team. Yoongi is not a fan of soccer. But, unfortunately for him, his friend Taehyung is. What happens when Taehyung gets front row seats for the first game of the season right behind the goal, right where Hoseok can see Yoongi?
Hoseok is the star player for South Korea’s national soccer team. Yoongi is not a fan of soccer. But, unfortunately for him, his friend Taehyung is. What happens when Taehyung gets front row seats for the first game of the season right behind the goal, right where Hoseok can see Yoongi?
Hoseok is the star player for South Korea’s national soccer team. Yoongi is not a fan of soccer. But, unfortunately for him, his friend Taehyung is. What happens when Taehyung gets front row seats for the first game of the season right behind the goal, right where Hoseok can see Yoongi?
Hoseok is the star player for South Korea’s national soccer team. Yoongi is not a fan of soccer. But, unfortunately for him, his friend Taehyung is. What happens when Taehyung gets front row seats for the first game of the season right behind the goal, right where Hoseok can see Yoongi?
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Lunch? It’s not a date if your friends come! Right?
Hoseok is the star player for South Korea’s national soccer team. Yoongi is not a fan of soccer. But, unfortunately for him, his friend Taehyung is. What happens when Taehyung gets front row seats for the first game of the season right behind the goal, right where Hoseok can see Yoongi?
Hoseok is the star player for South Korea’s national soccer team. Yoongi is not a fan of soccer. But, unfortunately for him, his friend Taehyung is. What happens when Taehyung gets front row seats for the first game of the season right behind the goal, right where Hoseok can see Yoongi?
Hoseok is the star player for South Korea’s national soccer team. Yoongi is not a fan of soccer. But, unfortunately for him, his friend Taehyung is. What happens when Taehyung gets front row seats for the first game of the season right behind the goal, right where Hoseok can see Yoongi?
Hoseok is the star player for South Korea’s national soccer team. Yoongi is not a fan of soccer. But, unfortunately for him, his friend Taehyung is. What happens when Taehyung gets front row seats for the first game of the season right behind the goal, right where Hoseok can see Yoongi?
When counting objects in Korean, the general form is:
Noun + # + Counter
Counters must be used in Korean when counting objects. Usually native Korean numbers are used in counting objects. The rough definition of the following counters is in parentheses with their associated nouns afterwards.
벌 (suit) => clothing like shirts, skirts, pants, ect.
대 (unit) => vehicles and machines like cars, fridges, ect.
개 (piece) => things or when unsure about which counter to use
병 (bottle) => bottles of coke, beer, ect.
사람 (people) => people (informal)
명 (people) => people (informal)
분 (people) => people (formal)
잔 (cup/glass) => cups or glasses of coffee, tea, ect.
장 (sheet) => sheet of paper, tickets, stamps
자루 (piece) => pencils, pens, long handled things, guns
살 (year-old) => age
갑 (packet) => packets of cigarettes, matches, ect.
번 (times) => frequency
송이 (stems) => flowers
통 (box) => letters, boxes of cookies, gum, ect.
켤레 (pairs) => pairs of shoes, socks, gloves, ect.
마리 (animals) => animals like cats, fish, ect.
시간 (hour) => time
달 (month) => month
권 (volume) => books, notebooks, ect.
Use the Sino-Korean numbers for the following counters.
층 (floor) => building floors
호실 (room number) => room numbers of dorms, hotels, ect.
인분 (servings of food) => servings of rice, meat, ect.