Learn 55 abbreviations for texting & messaging in English

166,693 views ・ 2020-06-25

Learn English with Gill


μ•„λž˜ μ˜λ¬Έμžλ§‰μ„ λ”λΈ”ν΄λ¦­ν•˜μ‹œλ©΄ μ˜μƒμ΄ μž¬μƒλ©λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ²ˆμ—­λœ μžλ§‰μ€ 기계 λ²ˆμ—­λ©λ‹ˆλ‹€.

00:00
Hello, I'm Gill at www.engvid.com and today's lesson, we're looking at shortened forms of
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μ•ˆλ…•ν•˜μ„Έμš”, μ €λŠ” www.engvid.com의 Gillμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€ . 였늘 μˆ˜μ—…μ—μ„œλŠ” 약어라고 ν•˜λŠ” κΈ΄ λ‹¨μ–΄μ˜ μΆ•μ•½ν˜•μ„ μ‚΄νŽ΄λ³΄κ³  μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€
00:11
longer words, which are called abbreviations. When you make something shorter, it's called
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. 짧게 λ§Œλ“€λ©΄
00:17
an abbreviation. That's a very long word for something that's very short, okay? So, you
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μ€„μž„λ§μ΄λΌκ³  ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그것은 맀우 짧은 것을 κ°€λ¦¬ν‚€λŠ” 맀우 κΈ΄ λ‹¨μ–΄μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€ , μ•Œμ•˜μ£ ? 예λ₯Ό λ“€μ–΄
00:26
will see these, for example, in a text message on your mobile phone or maybe in an informal
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νœ΄λŒ€ μ „ν™”μ˜ 문자 λ©”μ‹œμ§€, 비곡식
00:36
email or on a forum online on the internet where people are being quite chatty and maybe
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이메일 λ˜λŠ” μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄ μˆ˜λ‹€μŠ€λŸ½κ³ 
00:47
a bit casual. And also, they may be in a hurry and they don't want to type the whole word.
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μ•½κ°„ μΊμ£Όμ–Όν•œ 인터넷 온라인 ν¬λŸΌμ—μ„œ μ΄λŸ¬ν•œ λ‚΄μš©μ„ λ³Ό 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ˜ν•œ 그듀은 λ°”λΉ μ„œ 전체 단어λ₯Ό μž…λ ₯ν•˜κ³  싢지 μ•Šμ„ μˆ˜λ„ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
00:54
They just want to put a shorter version of the word or group of words, so people use
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그듀은 단지 λ‹¨μ–΄λ‚˜ 단어 그룹의 더 짧은 버전을 λ„£κΈ°λ₯Ό μ›ν•˜κΈ° λ•Œλ¬Έμ— μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ€
01:02
these for that. So, let's have a look, shall we?
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이λ₯Ό μœ„ν•΄ 이것을 μ‚¬μš©ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 자, ν•œ 번 λ³ΌκΉŒμš”?
01:09
This might look rather strange at first, but I hope it will begin to make since as we go
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이것은 μ²˜μŒμ—λŠ” λ‹€μ†Œ μ΄μƒν•˜κ²Œ 보일 수 μžˆμ§€λ§Œ, μš°λ¦¬κ°€ μ§„ν–‰ν•˜λ©΄μ„œ 그것이 μ‹œμž‘λ˜κΈ°λ₯Ό λ°”λžλ‹ˆλ‹€
01:14
through. So, some of these shortened forms are based on numbers, because if you have
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. λ”°λΌμ„œ μ΄λŸ¬ν•œ μΆ•μ•½ν˜• 쀑 μΌλΆ€λŠ” 숫자λ₯Ό 기반으둜 ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ™œλƒν•˜λ©΄
01:24
this number 2, it can also mean the word "to", as well as the number two, "to", or "too".
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이 숫자 2κ°€ 있으면 "to"λΌλŠ” 단어와 숫자 2인 "to" λ˜λŠ” "too"λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•  μˆ˜λ„ 있기 λ•Œλ¬Έμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€.
01:39
So, it's often used to represent one of those words. So, if you say this, it's "to be".
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λ”°λΌμ„œ μ΄λŸ¬ν•œ 단어 쀑 ν•˜λ‚˜λ₯Ό λ‚˜νƒ€λ‚΄λŠ” 데 자주 μ‚¬μš©λ©λ‹ˆλ‹€ . κ·Έλž˜μ„œ μ΄λ ‡κ²Œ λ§ν•˜λ©΄ "λ˜λ‹€"κ°€ λ©λ‹ˆλ‹€.
01:50
You've got the letter B and the number 2 - 2b. It's the verb "to be", okay? So, that's a
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문자 B와 숫자 2 - 2bκ°€ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. "λ˜λ‹€"λΌλŠ” λ™μ‚¬μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€, μ•Œκ² μ£ ? λ”°λΌμ„œ μ΄λŠ”
01:59
very quick way, especially in a text message, or maybe in Twitter as well where you're limited
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맀우 λΉ λ₯Έ λ°©λ²•μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 특히 문자 λ©”μ‹œμ§€ λ‚˜ νŠΉμ • 문자 수둜 μ œν•œλ˜λŠ” Twitterμ—μ„œλ„ λ§ˆμ°¬κ°€μ§€μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€
02:08
to a certain number of characters. That's another reason why people shorten these. So,
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. 그것이 μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄ 이것을 μ€„μ΄λŠ” 또 λ‹€λ₯Έ μ΄μœ μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ
02:16
2b. So, can you read this one? 2day. So that means "today". On this day, today. Okay? And
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2b. 자, 이 글을 읽을 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆκΉŒ? 2 일. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ 그것은 "였늘"을 μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 이날, 였늘. μ’‹μ•„μš”?
02:29
then this one: 2moro. So, it's not spelt the usual way - tomorrow, but again, that's to
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그리고 이것은 2moroμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ”°λΌμ„œ 일반적인 μ² μžλ²•μ΄ μ•„λ‹™λ‹ˆλ‹€
02:43
make it shorter. "Moro", it's a kind of phonetic spelling, 2moro. And this one - 2nite, "tonight",
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. "λͺ¨λ‘œ", μΌμ’…μ˜ μŒμ„± 철자, 2moroμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그리고 이건 - 2nite, "tonight",
02:53
this evening, tonight. Okay.
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였늘 저녁, 였늘밀. μ’‹μ•„μš”.
02:57
Now, can you think what this one might mean? "F2F", so this is "to" in the middle. If you
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자, 이것이 무엇을 μ˜λ―Έν•˜λŠ”μ§€ 생각할 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆκΉŒ? "F2F", 쀑간에 "to"κ°€ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 당신이
03:08
think of your face - face to face. So, if you want a meeting with someone, or a lesson,
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λ‹Ήμ‹ μ˜ 얼꡴을 μƒκ°ν•œλ‹€λ©΄ - 얼꡴을 λ§žλŒ€κ³ . λ”°λΌμ„œ λˆ„κ΅°κ°€μ™€ 회의λ₯Ό μ›ν•˜κ±°λ‚˜ λ ˆμŠ¨μ„ μ›ν•˜κ±°λ‚˜
03:19
you don't want to use Skype, you don't want to use the phone, you want to see them face
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Skypeλ₯Ό μ‚¬μš©ν•˜κ³  싢지 μ•Šκ±°λ‚˜ μ „ν™”λ₯Ό μ‚¬μš©ν•˜κ³  싢지 μ•Šκ±°λ‚˜
03:25
to face, in the same room, person to person. So, that's "face to face". Okay? And then
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λŒ€λ©΄, 같은 λ°©μ—μ„œ μΌλŒ€μΌλ‘œ 보고 싢을 λ•Œ . κ·Έλž˜μ„œ "λŒ€λ©΄"μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ’‹μ•„μš”? 그리고
03:35
this one, these letters we're covering later, but again the "2" appears here. "g2cu". If
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이것, μš°λ¦¬κ°€ λ‚˜μ€‘μ— λ‹€λ£° 이 κΈ€μžλ“€, κ·ΈλŸ¬λ‚˜ λ‹€μ‹œ "2"κ°€ 여기에 λ‚˜νƒ€λ‚©λ‹ˆλ‹€. "g2cu".
03:47
you listen to "cu", if you say the letters, "c" and "u", it's "see" and "you". Okay? So,
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"cu"λ₯Ό λ“€μœΌλ©΄ "c"와 "u"λΌλŠ” κΈ€μžλ₯Ό λ§ν•˜λ©΄ "see"와 "you"μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ’‹μ•„μš”? κ·Έλž˜μ„œ
04:04
those letters sound like those words. So, they are used to represent those words. And
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κ·Έ κΈ€μžλ“€μ€ κ·Έ λ‹¨μ–΄λ“€μ²˜λŸΌ λ“€λ¦½λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ”°λΌμ„œ μ΄λŸ¬ν•œ 단어λ₯Ό λ‚˜νƒ€λ‚΄λŠ” 데 μ‚¬μš©λ©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그리고
04:12
the "g" means "good". Good to see you. Okay? Good to see you, right? That's easy. Okay.
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"g"λŠ” "쒋은"을 μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ§Œλ‚˜μ„œ λ°˜κ°€μ›Œ. μ’‹μ•„μš”? λ§Œλ‚˜μ„œ λ°˜κ°€μ›Œ, 그렇지? μ‰½μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ’‹μ•„μš”.
04:29
Let's move on to 4. So again, 4, the number 4 can also look like that word, "for", for.
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4둜 λ„˜μ–΄κ°€ λ΄…μ‹œλ‹€. λ‹€μ‹œ 4, 숫자 4λŠ” "for", forλΌλŠ” λ‹¨μ–΄μ²˜λŸΌ 보일 μˆ˜λ„ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
04:43
So, 4get. "Forget", to forget something. When you don't remember, you forget. And this one,
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κ·Έλž˜μ„œ, 4get. "μžŠμ–΄", 무언가λ₯Ό μžŠλ‹€. κΈ°μ–΅ν•˜μ§€ λͺ»ν•  λ•ŒλŠ” μžŠλŠ”λ‹€. 그리고 이건,
04:56
b4, "before", okay? Before. Not after, but before. So, that's another nice short one
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b4, "이전", μ•Œμ•˜μ§€? 전에. ν›„κ°€ μ•„λ‹ˆλΌ 전에. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ, 그것은
05:10
for a longer word, okay?
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더 κΈ΄ 단어에 λŒ€ν•œ 또 λ‹€λ₯Έ 멋진 짧은 κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€, μ•Œμ•˜μ£ ?
05:13
Next one is 8. Now, this is a rather funny one, but it's very useful. So, we've got here
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λ‹€μŒμ€ 8μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 자, 이것은 λ‹€μ†Œ μž¬λ―Έμžˆμ§€λ§Œ 맀우 μœ μš©ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ μš°λ¦¬λŠ” μ—¬κΈ°
05:21
cu, like this one again, cul8r. So, "see you later". Okay? The 8 is part of the word "later".
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cu, μ΄κ²ƒμ²˜λŸΌ λ‹€μ‹œ cul8r에 λ„λ‹¬ν–ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ " λ‚˜μ€‘μ— 보자". μ’‹μ•„μš”? 8은 "λ‚˜μ€‘μ—"λΌλŠ” λ‹¨μ–΄μ˜ μΌλΆ€μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€.
05:47
See you later. It's very, very quick. One, two, three, four, five characters. There are
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λ‚˜μ€‘μ— λ΄μš”. μ•„μ£Ό μ•„μ£Ό λΉ λ¦…λ‹ˆλ‹€. ν•˜λ‚˜, λ‘˜, μ…‹, λ„·, λ‹€μ„― κΈ€μž.
05:57
five letters in the word "later" on its own. Here, you've got "see you later" just in five
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"λ‚˜μ€‘μ—"λΌλŠ” 단어 μžμ²΄μ—λŠ” λ‹€μ„― κΈ€μžκ°€ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ—¬κΈ°, "λ‚˜μ€‘μ— λ§Œλ‚˜μš”"κ°€ λ‹€μ„―
06:06
characters, okay? This one m8, "mate". I don't know if that word is used so much in America
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κΈ€μžλ‘œ λ˜μ–΄ μžˆμ–΄μš”, μ•Œμ•˜μ£ ? 이 m8, "λ™λ£Œ". κ·Έ 단어가 λ―Έκ΅­μ΄λ‚˜ μΊλ‚˜λ‹€μ—μ„œ κ·Έλ ‡κ²Œ 많이 μ“°μ΄λŠ”μ§€λŠ” λͺ¨λ₯΄κ² μ§€λ§Œ
06:19
or Canada, but in the UK, people say "mate" when they mean "friend". My mate, it's an
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μ˜κ΅­μ—μ„œλŠ” μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄ " 친ꡬ"λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•  λ•Œ "mate"라고 ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‚΄ 친ꡬ,
06:31
informal word for "friend". Oh, how are you doing, mate? How are you, mate? It's a very
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"친ꡬ"에 λŒ€ν•œ 비곡식 λ‹¨μ–΄μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 였, μ–΄λ–»κ²Œ μ§€λ‚΄μš”, 친ꡬ? 잘 μ§€λƒˆμ–΄ 친ꡬ μ•Ό?
06:38
friendly sort of word to use. So, "mate". And this one, can you guess what this one
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μ‚¬μš©ν•˜κΈ°μ— 맀우 μΉœκ·Όν•œ λ‹¨μ–΄μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ "λ©”μ΄νŠΈ". 그리고 이것은, 이것이 무엇인지 μΆ”μΈ‘ν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆκΉŒ
06:47
is? W8 - wait, wait. Can you wait? W8, "wait", okay? So, they're quite useful.
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? W8 - 잠깐, 잠깐. κΈ°λ‹€λ € μ€„μˆ˜μžˆμ–΄? W8, "κΈ°λ‹€λ €", μ•Œμ•˜μ§€? κ·Έλž˜μ„œ 그것듀은 κ½€ μœ μš©ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€.
07:04
Right, let's move on to the letters, then. So, B we had already, "to be". So, that's
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자, 그럼 κΈ€μžλ‘œ λ„˜μ–΄κ°‘μ‹œλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ BλŠ” 이미 "to be"μ˜€μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
07:13
the verb "to be", just B, B. Bcos is the word "because", which takes a long time to write,
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BcosλŠ” " because"λΌλŠ” 단어인데, μ œκ°€ 방금 λ°œκ²¬ν•œ κ²ƒμ²˜λŸΌ μ“°λŠ” 데 였랜 μ‹œκ°„μ΄ κ±Έλ¦½λ‹ˆλ‹€
07:30
as I just discovered there. Because - bcos, because a lot of people pronounce this word
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. μ™œλƒν•˜λ©΄ - bcosλŠ” λ§Žμ€ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄ 이 단어λ₯Ό
07:43
"because, because", very quickly. Cos, people also put "cos", not just "bcos", but they
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"because, because"라고 맀우 빨리 λ°œμŒν•˜κΈ° λ•Œλ¬Έμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. Cos, μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ€ "bcos"뿐만 μ•„λ‹ˆλΌ
07:50
just put "cos", because when people are speaking, they sometimes say "cos" instead of "because"
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"cos"도 λ„£μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ™œλƒν•˜λ©΄ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄ 말할 λ•Œ
08:02
just if they're speaking quickly and informally. So, that's because. This one, a bit different.
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λΉ λ₯΄κ³  λΉ„κ³΅μ‹μ μœΌλ‘œ 말할 λ•Œ "because"λŒ€μ‹  "cos"라고 λ§ν•˜κΈ° λ•Œλ¬Έμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλ ‡κΈ° λ•Œλ¬Έμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 이것은 쑰금 λ‹€λ¦…λ‹ˆλ‹€.
08:11
The b doesn't stand for "be" this time, but can you guess what it might be? Something
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bλŠ” μ΄λ²ˆμ—λŠ” "be"λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•˜μ§€ μ•Šμ§€λ§Œ, 그것이 무엇인지 μΆ”μΈ‘ν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆκΉŒ? μ–΄λ–€
08:18
day, a special day that comes once a year? A birthday. So, that's birthday, okay? Now,
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λ‚ , 1년에 ν•œ 번 μ˜€λŠ” νŠΉλ³„ν•œ λ‚ ? 생일. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ, 그게 생일이야, μ•Œμ•˜μ§€? 자,
08:31
this one is another different one. F is "friend", so can you guess what the B stands for? There
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이것은 또 λ‹€λ₯Έ κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. FλŠ” "친ꡬ"인데 Bκ°€ 무엇을 μ˜λ―Έν•˜λŠ”μ§€ μΆ”μΈ‘ν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆκΉŒ?
08:42
are two possibilities, actually. This is used for two different words. It can mean best
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μ‹€μ œλ‘œ 두 가지 κ°€λŠ₯성이 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 이것은 두 개의 λ‹€λ₯Έ 단어에 μ‚¬μš©λ©λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ°€μž₯ μΉœν•œ
08:49
friend, my best friend, or it can mean boyfriend, boyfriend, okay? So, you can only tell from
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친ꡬ, λ‚΄ κ°€μž₯ μΉœν•œ 친ꡬλ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•  μˆ˜λ„ 있고 λ‚¨μž 친ꡬ, λ‚¨μž 친ꡬλ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•  μˆ˜λ„ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ”°λΌμ„œ λ¬Έλ§₯을 ν†΅ν•΄μ„œλ§Œ 그것이 μ–΄λŠ 것인지 μ•Œ 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€
08:59
the context which one it is. Best friend or boyfriend, unless they happen to be the same.
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. κ°€μž₯ μΉœν•œ 친ꡬ λ˜λŠ” λ‚¨μž 친ꡬ, 같은 κ²½μš°κ°€ μ•„λ‹ˆλΌλ©΄.
09:08
If your boyfriend is your best friend, and your best friend is your boyfriend, then that's
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λ‹Ήμ‹ μ˜ λ‚¨μž μΉœκ΅¬κ°€ λ‹Ήμ‹ μ˜ κ°€μž₯ μΉœν•œ 친ꡬ이고 λ‹Ήμ‹ μ˜ κ°€μž₯ μΉœν•œ μΉœκ΅¬κ°€ λ‹Ήμ‹ μ˜ λ‚¨μž 친ꡬ라면 그것은
09:13
- I don't know, that's easy then. Not confusing. Okay. And then this one, this is, again, very
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- 잘 λͺ¨λ₯΄κ² μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. ν˜Όλž€μŠ€λŸ½μ§€ μ•ŠμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ’‹μ•„μš”. 그리고 이것은, 이것은 λ‹€μ‹œ, 맀우
09:22
different. If you're invited to a party that you may get a printed invitation, or it may
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λ‹€λ¦…λ‹ˆλ‹€. νŒŒν‹°μ— μ΄ˆλŒ€λ°›μ€ 경우 μΈμ‡„λœ μ΄ˆλŒ€μž₯을 λ°›κ±°λ‚˜
09:30
be in an email, byob. And it's an instruction to bring something. Bring - what do you take
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이메일에 μžˆμ„ 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그리고 무언가λ₯Ό κ°€μ Έμ˜€λΌλŠ” μ§€μ‹œμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ°€μ Έμ˜€κΈ° -
09:40
to a party, usually, that begins with B? Something to drink, the container that the drink comes
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B둜 μ‹œμž‘ν•˜λŠ” νŒŒν‹°μ— 보톡 무엇을 κ°€μ Έκ°€λ‚˜μš”? λ§ˆμ‹€ 것, μŒλ£Œκ°€ λ“€μ–΄κ°€λŠ” μš©κΈ°λŠ”
09:48
in is a bottle. So, bring your own bottle, okay? Right. Let's move on.
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λ³‘μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·ΈλŸ¬λ‹ˆ 병을 κ°€μ Έμ˜€μ„Έμš”, μ•Œμ•˜μ£ ? 였λ₯Έμͺ½. κ³„μ†ν•©μ‹œλ‹€.
10:00
So, we've got C again, which we had before, "cu" as we had before and also "cd" together
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κ·Έλž˜μ„œ, μš°λ¦¬λŠ” λ‹€μ‹œ Cλ₯Ό μ–»μ—ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 이전에 κ°€μ‘Œλ˜ "cu"와 "cd"λŠ” ν•¨κ»˜
10:11
can mean "could", could. And also, we don't have it written here, but "sd" or "shd" can
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"ν•  수 μžˆλ‹€", ν•  수 μžˆλ‹€λŠ” 것을 μ˜λ―Έν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ˜ν•œ μ—¬κΈ°μ—λŠ” 쓰지 μ•Šμ•˜μ§€λ§Œ "sd" λ˜λŠ” "shd"λŠ”
10:27
mean "should". Could and should. That's the more usual one, with "shd". So, could, could,
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"ν•΄μ•Ό ν•œλ‹€"λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. ν•  수 있고 ν•΄μ•Ό ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그것은 "shd"와 ν•¨κ»˜ 더 일반적인 κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ, ν•  수 μžˆμ–΄μš”,
10:41
okay?
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μ•Œμ•˜μ£ ?
10:42
D often means "do", the little verb "to do". So, "du", do you want to meet, whatever. And
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DλŠ” μ’…μ’… "ν•˜λ‹€", μž‘μ€ 동사 "ν•˜λ‹€"λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ, "두", λ§Œλ‚˜κ³  μ‹Άλ‹ˆ, 뭐든지. 그리고
10:54
this one is a useful one. If you're decorating your house, you buy - you're doing it, you're
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이것은 μœ μš©ν•œ κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‹Ήμ‹  이 집을 κΎΈλ―Έκ³  μžˆλ‹€λ©΄, 당신은 그것을 ν•˜κ³ ,
11:03
buying the paint, you're buying the brushes, you're buying rolls of wallpaper, all of that.
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페인트λ₯Ό 사고, 뢓을 사고, 벽지 둀을 사고, κ·Έ λͺ¨λ“  것을 사고 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
11:11
You might be cutting pieces of wood, all sorts of things. And it's called DIY, and there
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당신은 λ‚˜λ¬΄ 쑰각, λͺ¨λ“  μ’…λ₯˜μ˜ 물건을 자λ₯΄κ³  μžˆμ„μ§€λ„ λͺ¨λ¦…λ‹ˆλ‹€ . 그리고 DIY라고 ν•˜λŠ”λ°,
11:18
is a shop called a DIY shop, where you buy all these things. And it means "do it yourself".
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DIY μƒ΅μ΄λΌλŠ” κ°€κ²Œκ°€ μžˆμ–΄μ„œ 이 λͺ¨λ“  것을 μ‚΄ 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그리고 그것은 "슀슀둜 ν•˜λΌ"λŠ” λœ»μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 집을 κΎΈλ―ΈκΈ° μœ„ν•΄
11:31
Meaning you don't pay a professional to come and decorate your home, you do it yourself,
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μ „λ¬Έκ°€μ—κ²Œ λΉ„μš©μ„ μ§€λΆˆν•˜μ§€ 말고 직접 ν•˜μ„Έμš”,
11:40
okay? But people always just say "DIY". Some people love DIY. They spend their weekends
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μ•Œμ•˜μ£ ? κ·ΈλŸ¬λ‚˜ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ€ 항상 "DIY"라고 λ§ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ–΄λ–€ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ€ DIYλ₯Ό μ’‹μ•„ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그듀은 DIYλ₯Ό ν•˜λ©΄μ„œ 주말을 λ³΄λƒ…λ‹ˆλ‹€
11:50
doing DIY. So, we don't often say "do it yourself". It takes too long to say and even longer to
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. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ μš°λ¦¬λŠ” "슀슀둜 ν•˜λΌ"λŠ” 말을 자주 ν•˜μ§€ μ•ŠμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ§ν•˜λŠ” 데 λ„ˆλ¬΄ 였래 걸리고 μ“°λŠ” 데 더 였래 κ±Έλ¦½λ‹ˆλ‹€
12:01
write.
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.
12:02
Okay, so next one, E. So, if you say this and you say it - this letter, the way Americans
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자, λ‹€μŒμ€ Eμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ 이 κΈ€μžλ₯Ό λ§ν•˜λ©΄ 미ꡭ인이
12:15
pronounce that letter, not the way British English people - in the UK, we say "zed" for
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κ·Έ κΈ€μžλ₯Ό λ°œμŒν•˜λŠ” 방식이지 영ꡭ인이 λ°œμŒν•˜λŠ” 방식이 μ•„λ‹™λ‹ˆλ‹€ . μ˜κ΅­μ—μ„œλŠ” κ·Έ κΈ€μžλ₯Ό "zed"라고 ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€
12:23
that letter, but in America and probably Canada too, I think - no, they don't, sorry. In America,
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. ν•˜μ§€λ§Œ λ―Έκ΅­κ³Ό μ•„λ§ˆλ„ μΊλ‚˜λ‹€μ—μ„œλ„ λ§ˆμ°¬κ°€μ§€μΌ κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ£„μ†‘ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ―Έκ΅­μ—μ„œλŠ”
12:33
they say "zee", okay? So, if you say ez, ez, that's "easy", easy, okay? And then this one,
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"zee"라고 ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ, ez, ez라고 ν•˜λ©΄ "쉽닀"μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그리고 λ‚˜μ„œ 이것은,
12:53
if you say it, it becomes fairly clear what it is: enuf, "enough", because "enough" has
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당신이 그것을 λ§ν•˜λ©΄, 그것이 무엇인지 κ½€ λΆ„λͺ…ν•΄μ§‘λ‹ˆλ‹€ : enuf, "enough", μ™œλƒν•˜λ©΄ "enough"λŠ”
13:03
a lot of letters in it, it's quicker to write it phonetically, enuf, okay?
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κ·Έ μ•ˆμ— λ§Žμ€ κΈ€μžλ₯Ό 가지고 있기 λ•Œλ¬Έμ—, μ†Œλ¦¬λ‚˜λŠ” λŒ€λ‘œ μ“°λŠ” 것이 더 λΉ λ¦…λ‹ˆλ‹€ , enuf, μ•Œκ² μ£ ?
13:15
And then finally for this column, G. Often means "good", as we had here. Good to see
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그리고 λ§ˆμ§€λ§‰μœΌλ‘œ 이 칼럼의 경우 G. μ’…μ’… μ—¬κΈ°μ—μ„œμ™€ 같이 "μ’‹μŒ"을 μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ§Œλ‚˜μ„œ λ°˜κ°€μ›Œ
13:23
you. So, "good", could be just g on it's on, or gd. And gnite, "good night". And then this
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. λ”°λΌμ„œ "good"은 κ·Έλƒ₯ g on it's on λ˜λŠ” gd일 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그리고 "κ΅Ώλ‚˜μž‡"을 μ™ΈμΉ©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그리고
13:36
one, we had bf, and now we've got gf. So, bf was "best friend" or "boyfriend". This
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이건, μš°λ¦¬λŠ” BFλ₯Ό κ°€μ‘Œκ³ , 이제 μš°λ¦¬λŠ” GFλ₯Ό μ–»μ—ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ bfλŠ” "κ°€μž₯ μΉœν•œ 친ꡬ" λ˜λŠ” "λ‚¨μž 친ꡬ"μ˜€μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
13:46
one is "girlfriend". Just girlfriend, okay. Girlfriend.
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이것은 "μ—¬μž 친ꡬ"μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλƒ₯ μ—¬μž 친ꡬ, μ•Œμ•˜μ–΄. μ—¬μž 친ꡬ.
13:54
Okay. So, let's move on to the next column. Q, if you say the letter q, it sounds like
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μ’‹μ•„μš”. 이제 λ‹€μŒ μ—΄λ‘œ μ΄λ™ν•˜κ² μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. Q, 문자 qλ₯Ό λ§ν•˜λ©΄
14:06
the word, that funny word where people stand in a line waiting for something, maybe in
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μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄ 무언가λ₯Ό 기닀리며 쀄을 μ„œ μžˆλŠ” μž¬λ―ΈμžˆλŠ” λ‹¨μ–΄μ²˜λŸΌ λ“€λ¦½λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ•„λ§ˆλ„
14:16
a shop waiting to be served. They're in a queue. So, someone might send you a text message:
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μƒμ μ—μ„œ 제곡되기λ₯Ό 기닀리고 μžˆμ„ κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그듀은 λŒ€κΈ°μ—΄μ— μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€ . λ”°λΌμ„œ λˆ„κ΅°κ°€κ°€ 문자 λ©”μ‹œμ§€λ₯Ό 보낼 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€
14:23
"I'm going to be late, I'm waiting in a q to buy my train ticket" or something like
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14:31
that. So, they just put "q".
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. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ 그듀은 κ·Έλƒ₯ "q"λ₯Ό λ„£μ—ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
14:34
Then, if you say this letter, it's r. So, ru, or ur, so it's the verb "to be", the form
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그럼 이 κΈ€μžλ₯Ό λ§ν•˜λ©΄ rμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ, ru λ˜λŠ” ur, "to be" 동사,
14:48
"are", okay?
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"are" ν˜•μ‹μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ•Œκ² μ£ ?
14:52
And then u we've had before. So, cu, du, ru, ur, okay?
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그리고 μš°λ¦¬λŠ” 전에 κ°€μ‘ŒμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ, cu, du, ru, ur, μ•Œκ² μ£ ?
15:02
V means "very", very. So, v and then vg, "very good".
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VλŠ” "맀우", 맀우λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ, v λ‹€μŒμ— vg, "맀우 μ’‹μŒ".
15:12
Then w, that can mean "with" or, yes, it can mean "with", and then wd, like the other ones
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그런 λ‹€μŒ wλŠ” "ν•¨κ»˜"λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 예, "ν•¨κ»˜"λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그런 λ‹€μŒ wdλŠ” μ—¬κΈ° μžˆλŠ” λ‹€λ₯Έ ν•­λͺ©κ³Ό λ§ˆμ°¬κ°€μ§€λ‘œ
15:27
we had here, could and should, wd means "would". So, one w - with. Wd - would.
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ν•  수 있고 ν•΄μ•Ό ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. wdλŠ” "ν•  것이닀"λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ ν•˜λ‚˜μ˜ w-와 ν•¨κ»˜. Wd-ν•  κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€.
15:38
And then this letter, if you say the letter, it's the letter y. So, if you say y and make
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그리고 이 λ¬ΈμžλŠ”, λ§Œμ•½ μ—¬λŸ¬λΆ„μ΄ κ·Έ 문자λ₯Ό λ§ν•œλ‹€λ©΄, 그것은 문자 yμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ”°λΌμ„œ y라고 λ§ν•˜κ³ 
15:47
it a question, it's that word, "why". So, y, maybe with a question mark means "why,
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의문문으둜 λ§Œλ“€λ©΄ "μ™œ"λΌλŠ” 단어가 λ©λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ y, μ•„λ§ˆλ„ λ¬ΌμŒν‘œμ™€ ν•¨κ»˜ "μ™œ,
16:01
why?" Or just the letter on its own could mean "you", just the letter "you", or the
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μ™œ?"λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•  κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ˜λŠ” 문자 μžμ²΄κ°€ "you", "you" λ˜λŠ”
16:13
possessive "your" if it appears with an r, yr, "your", okay? Good.
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μ†Œμœ κ²© "your"κ°€ r, yr, "your"와 ν•¨κ»˜ ν‘œμ‹œλ˜λŠ” 경우 "you"λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 쒋은.
16:21
Okay. So now, we got on to some really interesting ones. These are very similar. I don't know
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μ’‹μ•„μš”. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ 이제 μš°λ¦¬λŠ” 정말 ν₯미둜운 것듀을 μ‹œμž‘ν–ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€ . 이듀은 맀우 μœ μ‚¬ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€.
16:31
if you can guess what they are. The "faik" part is the same in both, but there are two
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당신이 그듀이 무엇인지 μ§μž‘ν•  수 μžˆλŠ”μ§€ λͺ¨λ₯΄κ² μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. "faik" 뢀뢄은 λ‘˜ λ‹€ λ™μΌν•˜μ§€λ§Œ 두 가지
16:39
alternatives. There's afaik and sfaik. I don't know if you've seen these at all, but they
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λŒ€μ•ˆμ΄ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ•„νŽ˜μ΄ν¬μ™€ μŠ€νŽ˜μ΄ν¬κ°€ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 당신이 이걸 λ³Έ 적이 μžˆλŠ”μ§€ λͺ¨λ₯΄κ² μ§€λ§Œ
16:49
mean "as far as I know", okay? So, that's "as" far as I know, or "so" far as I know.
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"λ‚΄κ°€ μ•„λŠ” ν•œ"을 μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ, 그것은 λ‚΄κ°€ μ•„λŠ” ν•œ "μ•„λŠ” ν•œ", λ˜λŠ” λ‚΄κ°€ μ•„λŠ” ν•œ "μ•„λŠ” ν•œ"μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€.
17:09
They mean the same thing, it's just a different way of saying it with "as" or "so". As far
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그듀은 같은 것을 μ˜λ―Έν•˜λ©° "as" λ˜λŠ” "so"둜 λ§ν•˜λŠ” λ‹€λ₯Έ 방법일 λΏμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€.
17:15
as I know, the, you know, the chief executive is visiting tomorrow. As far as I know, it's
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λ‚΄κ°€ μ•„λŠ” ν•œ, 졜고 κ²½μ˜μžλŠ” 내일 λ°©λ¬Έν•  κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‚΄κ°€ μ•„λŠ” ν•œ,
17:24
what you say when you're not sure. You don't want to sound too definite about it, but as
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ν™•μ‹€ν•˜μ§€ μ•Šμ„ λ•Œ λ§ν•˜λŠ” κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 당신은 그것에 λŒ€ν•΄ λ„ˆλ¬΄ λͺ…ν™•ν•˜κ²Œ λ§ν•˜κ³  싢지 μ•Šμ§€λ§Œ,
17:30
far as I know, that is what is happening tomorrow, so far as I know. I may be wrong, but that's
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λ‚΄κ°€ μ•„λŠ” ν•œ 그것은 λ‚΄κ°€ μ•„λŠ” ν•œ 내일 일어날 μΌμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‚΄κ°€ 틀렸을 μˆ˜λ„ μžˆμ§€λ§Œ κ·Έλ ‡κ²Œ
17:38
what I've heard. So, that's what they are.
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λ“€μ—ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ 그것이 λ°”λ‘œ κ·Έλ“€μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€.
17:43
And then this one is a little bit jokey. Imo and imho, when you're giving your opinion,
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그리고 이것은 μ•½κ°„ λ†λ‹΄μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. Imo 와 imho, 당신이 λ‹Ήμ‹ μ˜ μ˜κ²¬μ„ 말할 λ•Œ
17:56
o is "opinion", what you think, your own opinion about something. You're saying "In my opinion",
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oλŠ” "의견", 당신이 μƒκ°ν•˜λŠ” 것, μ–΄λ–€ 것에 λŒ€ν•œ λ‹Ήμ‹  μžμ‹ μ˜ μ˜κ²¬μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€ . 당신은 "λ‚΄ 생각에"
18:10
or "in my humble opinion". So, "humble". It's where you don't want to sound very - too strong
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λ˜λŠ” "λ‚΄ κ²Έμ†ν•œ 생각에"라고 λ§ν•˜κ³  μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ "겸손"ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그것은 당신이 뭔가에 λŒ€ν•΄ λ„ˆλ¬΄ κ°•ν•˜κ²Œ 듀리고 싢지 μ•Šμ€ κ³³μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€
18:25
about something. It's your opinion. You don't want to push it onto other people. You want
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. 그것은 λ‹Ήμ‹ μ˜ μ˜κ²¬μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 당신은 그것을 λ‹€λ₯Έ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ—κ²Œ κ°•μš”ν•˜κ³  싢지 μ•ŠμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 당신은
18:33
to tell them what you think and you're being very polite about it. In a jokey way, a little
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당신이 μƒκ°ν•˜λŠ” 것을 κ·Έλ“€μ—κ²Œ λ§ν•˜κ³  μ‹Άκ³  그것에 λŒ€ν•΄ 맀우 μ •μ€‘ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 우슀꽝슀러운 λ°©μ‹μœΌλ‘œ,
18:40
bit, with the word "humble". In my humble opinion, this is what I think. But "in my
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"겸손"μ΄λΌλŠ” λ‹¨μ–΄λ‘œ μ•½κ°„. λ‚΄ κ²Έμ†ν•œ μƒκ°μœΌλ‘œλŠ” 이것이 λ‚΄κ°€ μƒκ°ν•˜λŠ” κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. ν•˜μ§€λ§Œ "제
18:48
opinion", it is not so jokey, okay. And then when you give your opinion and people can
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μƒκ°μ—λŠ”" κ·Έλ ‡κ²Œ 농담이 μ•„λ‹™λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그리고 당신이 λ‹Ήμ‹ μ˜ μ˜κ²¬μ„ μ œμ‹œν•˜λ©΄ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ€
18:56
see that you've been, you know, nice about it. You're not trying to impose it on them,
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당신이 그것에 λŒ€ν•΄ μΉœμ ˆν–ˆλ‹€λŠ” 것을 μ•Œ 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€ . 당신은 κ·Έλ“€μ—κ²Œ 그것을 κ°•μš”ν•˜λ €λŠ” 것이 μ•„λ‹™λ‹ˆλ‹€
19:03
okay.
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.
19:05
Right, so next one, fyi. Sometimes, people even say these letters without saying the
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자, λ‹€μŒμ€ μ°Έκ³ ν•˜μ„Έμš”. λ•Œλ•Œλ‘œ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ€ 단어λ₯Ό λ§ν•˜μ§€ μ•Šκ³  μ΄λŸ¬ν•œ 문자λ₯Ό λ§ν•˜κΈ°λ„ ν•˜λ©°
19:13
words, and it's often used in business. If someone forwards you an email, they might
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λΉ„μ¦ˆλ‹ˆμŠ€μ—μ„œ 자주 μ‚¬μš©λ©λ‹ˆλ‹€. λˆ„κ΅°κ°€ κ·€ν•˜μ—κ²Œ 이메일을 μ „λ‹¬ν•˜λŠ” 경우
19:19
type "fyi" at the top. "For your information", or it could be "for your interest". So, it's
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상단에 "fyi"λ₯Ό μž…λ ₯ν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. "For your information" λ˜λŠ” "for your interest"κ°€ 될 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ, 그것은
19:33
for information or something you might be interested in. For your information, for your
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당신이 관심을 κ°€μ§ˆ λ§Œν•œ μ •λ³΄λ‚˜ 무언가λ₯Ό μœ„ν•œ κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€ . λ‹Ήμ‹ μ˜ 정보λ₯Ό μœ„ν•΄, λ‹Ήμ‹ μ˜
19:40
interest. Okay.
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관심을 μœ„ν•΄. μ’‹μ•„μš”.
19:43
Right. So, then just finally, the third column. You can probably guess that this is short
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였λ₯Έμͺ½. 그럼 λ§ˆμ§€λ§‰μœΌλ‘œ μ„Έ 번째 μ—΄μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 이것이
19:52
for "possible", possible, just "poss".
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"possible", possible, κ·Έλƒ₯ "poss"의 μ€„μž„λ§μ΄λΌκ³  μΆ”μΈ‘ν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
19:59
Ppl, that was one I didn't understand for a long time, and then I suddenly realized
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Ppl, μ˜€λž«λ™μ•ˆ μ΄ν•΄ν•˜μ§€ λͺ»ν•˜λ‹€κ°€ 문득
20:05
"Ah, it's...", what do you think it is? It's "people", okay? People, "puh puh ul", it's
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"μ•„, κ·Έλ ‡κ΅¬λ‚˜..."λΌλŠ” 생각이 λ“€μ—ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그것은 "μ‚¬λžŒ"μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€, μ•Œμ•˜μ£ ? μ‚¬λžŒλ“€, "ν‘Έν‘ΈμšΈ"
20:19
just the ppl, people, okay?
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κ·Έλƒ₯ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄μ•Ό, μ‚¬λžŒλ“€, μ•Œμ•˜μ§€?
20:24
And then this one also is probably quite easy to guess. "Speak", speak. Okay?
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그리고 이것도 μ•„λ§ˆλ„ μΆ”μΈ‘ν•˜κΈ°κ°€ κ½€ μ‰¬μšΈ κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€ . "λ§ν•˜λ‹€", λ§ν•˜λ‹€. μ’‹μ•„μš”?
20:36
And this one, you can probably guess. Sry, sry, "sorry", sorry. When you're saying "sorry"
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그리고 이것은 μ•„λ§ˆ μ§μž‘ν•  수 μžˆμ„ κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ£„μ†‘ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ£„μ†‘ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. λˆ„κ΅°κ°€μ—κ²Œ "λ―Έμ•ˆν•˜λ‹€"κ³  말할 λ•Œ
20:47
to somebody.
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.
20:48
And this one is probably quite easy. Tks is "thanks". Thanks. Okay.
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그리고 이것은 μ•„λ§ˆλ„ κ½€ μ‰¬μšΈ κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. TksλŠ” "κ°μ‚¬ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€"μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ°μ‚¬ν•΄μš”. μ’‹μ•„μš”.
21:03
And then this one is very funny. Wysiwyg, and if you haven't seen that before, it's
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그리고 이것은 맀우 μž¬λ°ŒμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. Wysiwyg, 이전에 λ³Έ 적이 μ—†λ‹€λ©΄
21:16
"what you see is what you get". So, if you're buying something, for example. A car - what
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"λ³΄μ΄λŠ” 것이 μ–»λŠ” 것"μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 예λ₯Ό λ“€μ–΄ 무언가λ₯Ό κ΅¬λ§€ν•˜λŠ” κ²½μš°μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. μžλ™μ°¨ -
21:33
you see in front of you, if you pay the money, if you buy it, what you see there is what
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λˆˆμ•žμ— λ³΄μ΄λŠ” 것, λˆμ„ μ§€λΆˆν•˜κ³  사면 거기에 λ³΄μ΄λŠ” 것이
21:42
you get. You just see it and if you like it, that's what you're going to buy. What you
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당신이 μ–»λŠ” 것이닀. 당신은 그것을보고 당신이 그것을 μ’‹μ•„ν•œλ‹€λ©΄, 그것은 당신이 μ‚΄ κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 당신이
21:48
see is what you get. Okay. It's a bit funny, that one. Okay.
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λ³΄λŠ” 것은 당신이 μ–»λŠ” κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ’‹μ•„μš”. μ’€ 웃기넀, κ·Έκ±°. μ’‹μ•„μš”.
21:57
And then lots of x's. You can have all sorts of numbers of x's, depending on how enthusiastic
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그리고 xκ°€ 많이 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έ μ‚¬λžŒμ΄ μ–Όλ§ˆλ‚˜ μ—΄μ •μ μœΌλ‘œ λŠλΌλŠ”μ§€μ— 따라 λͺ¨λ“  μ’…λ₯˜μ˜ xλ₯Ό κ°€μ§ˆ 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€
22:05
the person is feeling. Xxx means kisses, okay? Kisses. And also, this one, because especially
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. XxxλŠ” ν‚€μŠ€λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. ν‚€μŠ€. 그리고 이것은 특히
22:20
actors do this. They go "mwah, mwah", like that. So, that's the sound of someone kissing.
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λ°°μš°λ“€μ΄ 이것을 ν•˜κΈ° λ•Œλ¬Έμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그듀은 "mwah, mwah"라고 λ§ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€ . κ·Έλž˜μ„œ, 그것은 λˆ„κ΅°κ°€κ°€ ν‚€μŠ€ν•˜λŠ” μ†Œλ¦¬μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€.
22:29
Mwah, like that, mwah. Okay.
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음, κ·Έλ ‡κ²Œ, 음. μ’‹μ•„μš”.
22:34
And then finally, to end with if you're not already asleep, this one means zzz. When you've
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그리고 λ§ˆμ§€λ§‰μœΌλ‘œ 아직 μž λ“€μ§€ μ•Šμ€ 경우 zzzλ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€.
22:44
fallen asleep and you may be snoring a little bit, making that "snore" sound, zzz. So, I
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잠이 λ“€μ—ˆμ„ λ•Œ μ•½κ°„ μ½”λ₯Ό 골고 "코골이" μ†Œλ¦¬κ°€ λ‚  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. zzz. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ, 특히 μ˜μ–΄ μ•ŒνŒŒλ²³μ˜ λ§ˆμ§€λ§‰ κΈ€μžμ΄κΈ°λ„ ν•˜λ―€λ‘œ κ·Έκ²ƒμœΌλ‘œ
22:53
thought that would be a good one to end with, especially as it's also the last letter of
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λλ‚΄λŠ” 것이 μ’‹κ² λ‹€κ³  μƒκ°ν–ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€
22:59
the English alphabet.
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.
23:01
So okay, there we are. I hope that's been useful for you and maybe taught you some vocabulary
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자, μ—¬κΈ° μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그것이 λ‹Ήμ‹ μ—κ²Œ μœ μš©ν–ˆκΈΈ 바라며 μš°λ¦¬κ°€ μ§„ν–‰ν•œ κ²ƒμ²˜λŸΌ λ‹Ήμ‹ μ—κ²Œ μ•½κ°„μ˜ μ–΄νœ˜λ₯Ό κ°€λ₯΄μ³μ£Όμ—ˆμ„ κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€
23:08
as well as we've gone along. So, if you'd like to go to the website www.engvid.com , there's
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. λ”°λΌμ„œ www.engvid.com μ›Ήμ‚¬μ΄νŠΈλ‘œ μ΄λ™ν•˜κ³  μ‹Άλ‹€λ©΄
23:14
a quiz there to test you on this. Also, if you'd like to see two other lessons on abbreviations,
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이에 λŒ€ν•΄ ν…ŒμŠ€νŠΈν•  수 μžˆλŠ” ν€΄μ¦ˆκ°€ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ˜ν•œ 약어에 λŒ€ν•œ λ‹€λ₯Έ 두 가지 κ°•μ˜λ₯Ό 보고 μ‹Άλ‹€λ©΄
23:24
there are two very good lessons. One by Ronnie and another by Alex. So, do look out for those,
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두 개의 μ•„μ£Ό 쒋은 κ°•μ˜κ°€ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. ν•˜λ‚˜λŠ” λ‘œλ‹ˆκ°€, λ‹€λ₯Έ ν•˜λ‚˜λŠ” μ•Œλ ‰μŠ€κ°€. μ—¬κΈ°μ—μ„œ 닀루지 μ•Šμ€
23:33
because they have covered some different examples which I have not covered here. So, do have
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λͺ‡ 가지 λ‹€λ₯Έ 예λ₯Ό λ‹€λ£¨μ—ˆκΈ° λ•Œλ¬Έμ— 그것듀을 μ°ΎμœΌμ‹­μ‹œμ˜€ . κ·ΈλŸ¬λ‹ˆ
23:40
a look at those. So, thanks very much for watching and hope to see you again soon. Bye
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그것듀을 μ‚΄νŽ΄λ³΄μ‹­μ‹œμ˜€. 그럼 μ‹œμ²­ν•΄μ£Όμ…”μ„œ λŒ€λ‹¨νžˆ κ°μ‚¬λ“œλ¦¬λ©° 곧 λ‹€μ‹œ 롐 수 있기λ₯Ό λ°”λžλ‹ˆλ‹€.
23:46
for now!
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μ§€κΈˆμ€ μ•ˆλ…•!
이 μ›Ήμ‚¬μ΄νŠΈ 정보

이 μ‚¬μ΄νŠΈλŠ” μ˜μ–΄ ν•™μŠ΅μ— μœ μš©ν•œ YouTube λ™μ˜μƒμ„ μ†Œκ°œν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ „ 세계 졜고의 μ„ μƒλ‹˜λ“€μ΄ κ°€λ₯΄μΉ˜λŠ” μ˜μ–΄ μˆ˜μ—…μ„ 보게 될 κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 각 λ™μ˜μƒ νŽ˜μ΄μ§€μ— ν‘œμ‹œλ˜λŠ” μ˜μ–΄ μžλ§‰μ„ 더블 ν΄λ¦­ν•˜λ©΄ κ·Έκ³³μ—μ„œ λ™μ˜μƒμ΄ μž¬μƒλ©λ‹ˆλ‹€. λΉ„λ””μ˜€ μž¬μƒμ— 맞좰 μžλ§‰μ΄ μŠ€ν¬λ‘€λ©λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ˜κ²¬μ΄λ‚˜ μš”μ²­μ΄ μžˆλŠ” 경우 이 문의 양식을 μ‚¬μš©ν•˜μ—¬ λ¬Έμ˜ν•˜μ‹­μ‹œμ˜€.

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