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Well put together <--영어로는 어떻게 말해요?

cheri
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Well put together <--영어로는 어떻게 말해요?

Postby cheri » April 19th, 2009 9:36 am

Is there a word in Korean that is similar to "well put-together" when describing a person?

A word that encompasses someone who is smart, confident, organized, always on-time, prepared, etc.?

And not necessarily just 다 잘한다. ^^

Thanks :D
Attempts to blog in Korean^^
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Ramblings about things related to (and sometimes not related to) Korea..usually this translates to FOOD^^
http://seoulberry.blogspot.com

manyakumi
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Postby manyakumi » April 19th, 2009 10:14 am

The words that come to my mind at this moment are...

두루 갖추다
To have general conditions

두루 갖춘 사람
A person who has good looking, style, wealth, knowledge and many other good things.

다재다능하다
To have a lot of skills and talents

팔방미인
A person who looks beautiful from any directions.
(= 다재다능한 사람 : A person who is good at everything)


:D

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hyunwoo
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Postby hyunwoo » April 20th, 2009 1:38 am

I think the common way to describe such a person is 괜찮은 사람 :)


" 그 사람 참 괜찮아요. "

" 그 사람 정말 괜찮아요. "


Cheri, btw, your title ... maybe it should be "한국어로 어떻게" instead of "영어로 어떻게" ? :D :D

cheri
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Postby cheri » April 20th, 2009 2:35 am

Muchos gracias! I''ll keep all of those in mind. :D

hyunwoo wrote:Cheri, btw, your title ... maybe it should be "한국어로 어떻게" instead of "영어로 어떻게" ? :D :D


Aha! Good point. :lol:
Attempts to blog in Korean^^
http://cheripracticeskorean.blogspot.com/

Ramblings about things related to (and sometimes not related to) Korea..usually this translates to FOOD^^
http://seoulberry.blogspot.com

javiskefka
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Postby javiskefka » April 20th, 2009 2:56 am

hyunwoo wrote:I think the common way to describe such a person is 괜찮은 사람 :)


" 그 사람 참 괜찮아요. "

" 그 사람 정말 괜찮아요. "



That's funny, because you wouldn't use OK like that unless you were being sarcastic ;)

cheri
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Postby cheri » April 20th, 2009 3:03 am

javiskefka wrote:
hyunwoo wrote:I think the common way to describe such a person is 괜찮은 사람 :)


" 그 사람 참 괜찮아요. "

" 그 사람 정말 괜찮아요. "



That's funny, because you wouldn't use OK like that unless you were being sarcastic ;)


Yeah, in English, if you describe someone as "ok" or "alright," it's not exactly very positive. : )
Attempts to blog in Korean^^
http://cheripracticeskorean.blogspot.com/

Ramblings about things related to (and sometimes not related to) Korea..usually this translates to FOOD^^
http://seoulberry.blogspot.com

hyunwoo
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Postby hyunwoo » April 20th, 2009 3:52 am

javiskefka wrote:That's funny, because you wouldn't use OK like that unless you were being sarcastic ;)


Haha. Right :) In Korean, if you want to say something in such fashion, you can say 나쁘지 않아요 .

In English 'not bad' can mean 'good', but in Korean, '나쁘지 않다' means 'not too bad' or 'not terrible' :)

javiskefka
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Postby javiskefka » April 20th, 2009 4:22 am

Just goes to show you that you can't depend too much on word-to-word translation :lol: .

yhenry
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Postby yhenry » April 20th, 2009 9:55 pm

how about, 그사람 끝내줘 or 기똥찬 사람이야
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kimchiandsoju
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Postby kimchiandsoju » April 20th, 2009 10:54 pm

wasn't there a slang word for somebody just like this in one of the advance lessons?

I can't remember it of course....

holdfast
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Postby holdfast » April 20th, 2009 11:49 pm

kimchiandsoju wrote:wasn't there a slang word for somebody just like this in one of the advance lessons?

I can't remember it of course....


i think the slang you are thinking of is 엄친아 but i don't think it would fit exactly the same meaning of "well put together."

so 괜잖아 always has a positive meaning? that explains a lot ^^
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Chris1
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Postby Chris1 » April 21st, 2009 12:14 am

holdfast wrote:so 괜잖아 always has a positive meaning? that explains a lot ^^


Yes, it does. This is very good to know because when you ask how something is/how much someone likes something, and if 괜찮아 is the answer.. it's positive--not the slightly negative meaning in English. For example:

A: Do you want to go outside?
B: Umm, I'm okay. (implying he/she rather stay inside)

가: 밖으로 좀 갈래?
나: 음.. 괜찮아. (yes, that sounds good)

Completly different outcomes...

괜찮은 편이다 also has a similar meaning.

manyakumi
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Postby manyakumi » April 21st, 2009 6:15 am

Chris1 wrote: 가: 밖으로 좀 갈래?
나: 음.. 괜찮아. (yes, that sounds good)


This answer can mean "no" also in Korean.

:wink:

Chris1
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Postby Chris1 » April 21st, 2009 11:32 am

manyakumi wrote:This answer can mean "no" also in Korean.

:wink:


Right. I guess it depends on your tone... Perhaps this would mean "no"

가: 밥 먹을래?
나: 괜찮아..

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