In celebration of first day of fall, here are the ultimate AUTUMN anthems.
Speaking of autumn anthems, it has come to my attention that this song, released in August (although it was not a part of the August rate, which I guess isn't unusual), has currently set up camp at #5 on MelOn.
Some really odd things going on on MelOn this summer.
Once again a Monsta X teaser that we don't understand.
Like why is Hyungwon pouring the blue stuff on the flower!? First of all wasn't he dead?
I always forget that they release those teasers 2 hours earlier than everyone else.
Wasn't he actually alive in the end tho? When he moved his hand in the water? And Minhyuk died in the tub after drinking that blue thingy? What I'm getting from it is he tries to make this blue flower Minhyuk was giving him under the bridge and idk, bring him back?
내 (my) looks like it should sound like 'nae', right?
but on Memrise, the audio pronounces it as 'dae', so is it supposed to sound like 'nae' or 'dae', or are both correct?
and ㅁ (m) sometimes sounds like ㅂ (b) in the audio pronounciations, so again, is that wrong, or are they both correct?
I found this when I started
Quote:
I want to say one incredibly important thing before you continue. People constantly ask me about the pronunciation of Korean letters, and how they can be best represented using English (Latin) characters. There is no perfect way to represent Korean characters using English letters (or sounds). The English letters presented above are the letters that you will commonly find being used to represent their respective Korean letters. While it is helpful (at first) to memorize the general sound of a Korean letter by using the English letter – you have to remember that Korean sounds are vastly different than English sounds. Not only are Korean sounds different than English sounds – but English sounds different depending on who is speaking (because of accents). Therefore, there is no perfect way to represent the Korean sounds in English.
For example, you will often see:
“K” and “G” used to represent “ㄱ.”
Or “D” and “T” to represent “ㄷ”
Or “R” and “L” to represent “ㄹ”