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In No Straight Roads, the player takes control of either Mayday or Zuke and can switch between them anytime in single player.The game is designed around a rhythm-based combat system in which the player can move freely without having to follow the beat, but still has to pay attention to audio cues in order to plan their moves. [7]
Road signs in South Korea are regulated by the Korean Road Traffic Authority (Korean: 도로교통안전공단). Sign for a bicycle crossing. Signs indicating dangers are triangular with a red border, yellow background and black pictograms. Mandatory instructions are white on a blue background, prohibitions are black on a white background with ...
It is a compound of the word 병; 病; byeong, meaning "of disease" or "diseased", and the word 신; 身; sin, a word meaning "body" originating from the Chinese character. This word originally refers to disabled individuals, but in modern Korean is commonly used as an insult with meanings varying contextually from "jerk" to "dumbass" or "dickhead"
Footage of Sunday’s crash broadcast by multiple South Korean news outlets showed the plane sliding on its belly at high speed, hitting an earthen embankment and erupting in a fireball.
The Naju Na clan (Korean: 나주 나씨; Hanja: 羅州 羅氏) was founded by Na Bu (나부 羅富), a Chinese native who travelled to Korea during the Goryeo period. The clan's bon-gwan is in Naju, South Jeolla Province, where Na Bu settled after coming to Korea.
Mayday is the third single album by South Korean girl group April. It was their second comeback in 2017, after releasing their third mini album Prelude in January. Background and release
Summer Vacation Part 1: Straight Road Trip; Special appearance by Cool (South Korean band) and Yoon Bora of Sistar in the first episode; Special appearance by Korean sportscasters, Heo Joon and Han Joon-hee in the second episode; Joo Won did the paragliding mission that he was unable to do during the last trip; 118 253-254 (S02E21, S02E22) 398-399
Bit-na (pronounced and sometimes romanised Bin-na) is a Korean feminine given name. Unlike most Korean given names , it is not composed of Sino-Korean morphemes which can be written with hanja , but is an indigenous Korean word: the root form of the Korean verb binnada ( 빛나다 ), meaning "to shine".