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  • 7:08 pm on August 1, 2023 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: language   

    Those people with too much XP… I finally found out how they are doing it. Those people in the diamon leauge who have like 50,000 xp. They obviously sold their soul to the duolingo bird in exchange for inconceivable amounts of xp.

    You called?

    Having played strategy games for 20 years, i can’t help min/max when i find a min/max strategy. So far I’ve found this: (which I think y’all are familiar with)

    1. Under the 15-min 2xp potion, do lessons until you hit Lesson 5 out of 6.
    2. Now open lesson #6 (or #4 – the last in the series)- start it but don’t finish.
    3. Let the 15 minute timer transpire
    4. Use this time to take a break – get back to work, eat, or sleep. Make sure the app doesn’t auto-close itself or you’ll lose on 20 free xp.
    5. When ready to go for another 15-min sprint, go back to the app and finish the lesson #6
    6. Lesson #6 will get double xp. And at the same time, you’ll also get a new 15-min 2xp potion.
    7. Do more lessons, and again try to reach the next lesson #6. Repeat.

    Sometimes the sequence of lessons is long, and you won’t be able to reach #6 before the 15 minutes is over. That’s fine. If you are very far from #6 (eg you only managed to finish the Chapter finale and are starting from #1), this may be a good time to use the morning/evening 2x potion.

     
  • 9:19 pm on July 31, 2023 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: language   

    > Is the Korean word “부 (Bu)” pronounced as “poo” and does it mean “wealth”?

    It’s pronounced boo, as in “he’s my boo”.

    I’m gonna attempt to explain my street level knowledge of the influence of hanja (written chinese) in korean here…

    Thousands of Korean words are actually korean pronunciations of chinese words that were inherited hundreds of years ago. It’s similar to how many words in an european language actually descend from latin – for example english word administration comes from administratio in latin, iglesia (church) in spanish comes from ecclesia in latin, etc.

    (More …)
     
  • 4:08 pm on July 23, 2023 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: language   

    They are weaved together from young-trending internet-centric niche jargon, which they themselves originate from various contexts.

    • 하수/고수 (and 중수 which I’ve heard less often) are old terms used to refer to the level of skill of a person or level of strategy. Could be used to describe the skill level of a Go(바둑) player, or skill of fighters in a traditional martial arts-themed literature (무협지). Martial arts literature has tended to take itself a bit seriously (even though they are describing fictional skills and mythical beings), and they use an absolute fuckton of superlatives to invite interest to the story and its character, so to lean into martial arts literature jargon invites some humor. These terms made their way into the internet (more to the DC인사이드-like bulletin board cultures), and also intermingled back and forth into gaming culture. (It started off by gamers using it to describe each other’s skill, and then some Korean games actively adopted the terminology as part of their official jargon, albeit with a light sense of ironic humor given that it has one origin foot in martial arts literature)
    (More …)
     
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