Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Sign Of The Week

As you may have surmised, the teaching of English is a big business in Korea. I remember in my first year finding a sheet that listed the fees parents had to pay to send their child to the hagwon I worked at.
I and my co-workers thought it was a license to print money.
Which makes it all the funnier when you see something like this:

It seems the kids that are taking lessons and going on to careers aren't absorbing quite as much as they should.
It's a mystery as to why signs like this happen, when you consider that the sign painter could find a foreigner to correct his grammar and spelling as easily as he could find a pot of kimchi.
But it does make our experience in Korea richer, and full of nuance and texture.
In the coming weeks, Flint and I will be passing on that experience to you.

5 comments:

  1. I wonder if the mumbers of that club are called mumberjacks.

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  2. You don't need a foreigner to tell you that you spelled something wrong, you just need something with spell check. It's amazing how many typed things that I have had to proofread that could have been fixed if the person had only payed attention to the little red underline.

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  3. I hadn't even thought of spell check. I just look at the Hagwons around, the number of NET's working for the government and could be asked to proof read.

    Spell check makes the mistakes even stupider.

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  4. My favorites signs or Korean misprints are as follows;

    1. Smoking reduces your adility to have an erection.
    2. Do not feed the goat or you may stimulate the goat.
    3. I want a double cheeseburger and a large cock.
    4. Sam's crap house in Duluth, GA.

    ReplyDelete
  5. You may stimulate the goat. Hahahahaha!!!!

    ReplyDelete