In Korea, asking someone's age is not only considered polite, I think it's actually a sign that you like/take an interest in them.
Unfortunately, in Korea you give your age as the year of your life that you are "in".
For example, my precious three-week-old nephew is starting his first year, which makes him one right now, and next July he will be two...which makes me dun-dun-dun twenty-nine right now, and THIRTY next month.
And then of course, I get to go back to the US and turn thirty AGAIN next year!
Can you believe this luck? I get to turn thirty, not once, but twice. What girl doesn't want that?
Unfortunately, in Korea you give your age as the year of your life that you are "in".
For example, my precious three-week-old nephew is starting his first year, which makes him one right now, and next July he will be two...which makes me dun-dun-dun twenty-nine right now, and THIRTY next month.
And then of course, I get to go back to the US and turn thirty AGAIN next year!
Can you believe this luck? I get to turn thirty, not once, but twice. What girl doesn't want that?
1 comments:
I think we are starting a trend! Larioses must live in a foreign country when they turn 30!
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