(Âü°í·Î CNN¼±Á¤ ÀÌÅ»¸®¾ÈµéÀÌ °¡Àå Àß ÇÏ´Â °Í: ¾Æ÷°ú ¿©ÀÚ²¿½Ã±â ±×¸®°í °Ñ¸ð½À Ä¡ÀåÇÏ´Â °Í.
ÀÌ¾î¼ CNN¼±Á¤ ¹Ì±¹ÀεéÀÌ °¡Àå Àß ÇÏ´Â °Í 1À§: °úÀåµÈ ÀλçÇϱâ (ÇÏÀÌ, ¾Ë·ÎÇÏ, "Ahoy!" "Aloha!" "Hey!"
"Hola!" "Howdy!" "Hiya!" "Ho there!" "Well, look who it is!" "What's
happenin'?!" "'Sup!" "Yo!" "Hello!"
)
1. Wired culture (¸ðµç °ÍÀÌ ÀÎÅͳݰú ½º¸¶Æ®ÆùÀ¸·Î ÀÌ·ç¾îÁö´Â ³ª¶ó. ÀÎÅÍ³Ý ¹× ½º¸¶Æ®Æù º¸±ÞÀ² ¼¼°è 1À§)
Want to see what the future looks like?
Book a ticket to the country with a worldwide high 82.7% Internet
penetration and where 78.5% of the entire population is on smartphones.
2. Whipping out the plastic (¸ðµç °áÀ縦 ½Å¿ëÄ«µå·Î ÇÏ´Â ³ª¶ó. ¼¼°è 1À§ ½Å¿ëÄ«µå »ç¿ëÀ²)
South Koreans became the world's top users of credit cards two years ago, according to data from the Bank of Korea.
While Americans made 77.9 credit card transactions per person in 2011 and Canadians made 89.6, South Koreans made 129.7.
3. Workaholics (ÆøźÁÖ¿Í ³ë¿¹Ã³·³ ÀÏÇÏ´Â ÀϹú·¹µé. ¼¼°è 1À§ ³ëµ¿½Ã°£. ±×·³¿¡µµ ºÒ±¸ÇÏ°í ÀÏ ¾ÈÇÒ ¶§ ÆøźÁÖ·Î Ç®¾î¹ö¸®´Â ³ª¶ó.)
South Koreans are so used to studying -- the country has the highest
education level in Organization for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD) countries, with 98% of the population completing
secondary education and 63% with a college education -- they can't get
out of the habit once they reach the work force.
You can see it in any Korean city, where lights in buildings blaze into
the late hours as workers slave away. There are still plenty of bosses
who drag their teams out for way too many rounds of soju/beer/whiskey
"bombs."
±×¿Ü Çѱ¹ÀÌ À¯¸íÇÑ °Í
¼Ò°³ÆÃ(¹Ì±¹¿¡¼± ºí¶óÀε嵥ÀÌÆ®)õ±¹,
¼ºÇüõ±¹,
ÈÀåǰõ±¹,
½Â¹«¿øÀÌ ÀÌ»Û ³ª¶ó,
¿©¼º°ñÆÛ Ãµ±¹,
½ºÅ¸Å©·¦Æ®°¡ ÈïÇÑ ³ª¶ó,
-------------> CNNÀÌ ¹Ì±¹, ÀÌÅ»¸®¾Æ, Çѱ¹ 3 °³±¹¸¸ ¼±Á¤Çؼ
±×µé ³ª¶óµéÀÌ °¡Àå Àß ÇÏ´Â °Í 10°³¸¦ ¹ßÇ¥ÇÑ °Í º¸¸é Çѱ¹ÀÌ
¼±Áø±¹ÀÎ °Í ¸Â´Âµ¥ Á¤Ä¡´Â ¾ÆÇÁ¸®Ä« Äá°í°øȱ¹ ¼öÁØ...