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"Wish" is a song by American industrial rock band Nine Inch Nails from their debut EP Broken (1992). It was released in 1992 as a promotional single from the EP. The drumming on the track was performed by Martin Atkins. [4] "Wish" was remixed twice for the companion disc to the EP, Fixed, as "Wish (Remix)" and "Fist Fuck
Naver Dictionary was launched in 1999, supporting the English language. [3] [4] It began launching mobile applications in 2010. [5] The product Line Dictionary, launched in 2014, was part of the platform. [2] By 2022, the platform reportedly had 60 different sub services, [6] and was the most popular online dictionary service in South Korea by ...
Randall, Mac (2004). "Nine Inch Nails". In Nathan Brackett; Christian Hoard (eds.). The New Rolling Stone Album Guide: Completely Revised and Updated 4th Edition. Simon and Schuster. pp. 587-588. ISBN 0-7432-0169-8. Reisfeld, Randy (1996). "Nine Inch Nails: The Perverse of Alternative". This Is the Sound: The Best of Alternative Rock. New York ...
The song was composed in 1961 by North Korean composer Kim Hyuk. [5] The song was commonly sung during the 1980s but were not sung for a long time due to the North Korean famine in the 1990s until it was revived at the World Children's Day event in 2016. [6] The song received the Kim Jong Il Prize and Kim Il Sung Prize in May 2016. [7]
It originally consisted of two sections: a Korean-English dictionary and a Chinese-English dictionary. The book was originally bound in leather. It was revised and republished three times over time. [1] In its 1911 edition under a different Korean title (한영사전; 韓英辭典), the word order was rearranged, new words were added, and the
Dong, Dong, Dongdaemun (Korean: 『동, 동, 동대문』) is a nursery rhyme sung among Korean children, usually while playing a game. It is also the name of the game. Its melody starts identically to the German children's song "Lasst uns froh und munter sein", but ends differently. [1]
The NIKL was originally founded at a non-governmental level as the Academy of the Korean Language (국어연구소) on May 1, 1984. [1] [3] It was established as a subsidiary of the Korean Ministry of Culture on January 23, 1991 under the name National Academy of the Korean Language (국립국어연구원). It took its original name again on ...
So-won is a Korean feminine given name. Its meaning differs based on the hanja used to write each syllable of the name. There are 68 hanja with the reading "so" [1] and 46 hanja with the reading "won" [2] on the South Korean government's official list of hanja which may be used in given names. It also means "wish, hope" in Korean. [3]