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On June 24 2013 03:48 Derez wrote:Show nested quote +On June 24 2013 03:41 AlternativeEgo wrote:On June 24 2013 03:37 ACrow wrote:On June 24 2013 03:34 Cheerio wrote: Does anyone know what foreign languages do they learn in korean schools? Afaik, Chinese is a little more common? But I guess they take learning a second language about as seriously as US-Americans do. It was discussed yesterday and some guy posted some statistics which showed good english score for South Korea. Don't know how the general Korean pro-gamer prioritize school and english though. It might be all about them games. Asia is notorious for teaching loads of english grammar/vocab but barely any speaking skills. They score highly in the tests but can't speak much. Also in korea you dont have much chance to use your english skills. Even on the internet in korea you mostly use korean sites(eg. naver instead of google etc.)
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Why is violence off? ZvZ with black blood is so depressing
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On June 24 2013 03:50 Uni1987 wrote: What the hell? Why gg? cause he lost
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this match is worth $1000
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On June 24 2013 03:50 Wein wrote: Who is casting? viOLet, Dragon and StarDust.
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On June 24 2013 03:50 Wein wrote: Who is casting?
Violet and Stardust
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On June 24 2013 03:51 figq wrote: this match is worth $1000 Bo5.
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On June 24 2013 03:48 Derez wrote:Show nested quote +On June 24 2013 03:41 AlternativeEgo wrote:On June 24 2013 03:37 ACrow wrote:On June 24 2013 03:34 Cheerio wrote: Does anyone know what foreign languages do they learn in korean schools? Afaik, Chinese is a little more common? But I guess they take learning a second language about as seriously as US-Americans do. It was discussed yesterday and some guy posted some statistics which showed good english score for South Korea. Don't know how the general Korean pro-gamer prioritize school and english though. It might be all about them games. Asia is notorious for teaching loads of english grammar/vocab but barely any speaking skills. They score highly in the tests but can't speak much. Most Korean progamers do not seem to have good grammar either though. "I'm exciting" is much more common than "I'm excited".
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On June 24 2013 03:51 Koshi wrote:Bo5.
Match != game.
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Hyun needs more burger tactic
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On June 24 2013 03:48 Derez wrote:Show nested quote +On June 24 2013 03:41 AlternativeEgo wrote:On June 24 2013 03:37 ACrow wrote:On June 24 2013 03:34 Cheerio wrote: Does anyone know what foreign languages do they learn in korean schools? Afaik, Chinese is a little more common? But I guess they take learning a second language about as seriously as US-Americans do. It was discussed yesterday and some guy posted some statistics which showed good english score for South Korea. Don't know how the general Korean pro-gamer prioritize school and english though. It might be all about them games. Asia is notorious for teaching loads of english grammar/vocab but barely any speaking skills. They score highly in the tests but can't speak much. They tend to this is in general actually, not just for English and not just for other languages, either.
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On June 24 2013 03:48 slowbacontron wrote: eewww their creep is gonna touch It's not gay unless the tumours touch.
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On June 24 2013 03:51 Koshi wrote:Bo5. match as in series, i mean was just checking how important is that after seeing how tlo lost the second game
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On June 24 2013 03:51 Koshi wrote:Bo5.
Which means it's five games in one match!
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On June 24 2013 03:51 Zyzz12 wrote:Show nested quote +On June 24 2013 03:51 Koshi wrote:On June 24 2013 03:51 figq wrote: this match is worth $1000 Bo5. Match != game.  True that.
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On June 24 2013 03:50 fuzzylogic44 wrote: Why is violence off? ZvZ with black blood is so depressing
All german videogames are like this x)
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On June 24 2013 03:51 rasnj wrote:Show nested quote +On June 24 2013 03:48 Derez wrote:On June 24 2013 03:41 AlternativeEgo wrote:On June 24 2013 03:37 ACrow wrote:On June 24 2013 03:34 Cheerio wrote: Does anyone know what foreign languages do they learn in korean schools? Afaik, Chinese is a little more common? But I guess they take learning a second language about as seriously as US-Americans do. It was discussed yesterday and some guy posted some statistics which showed good english score for South Korea. Don't know how the general Korean pro-gamer prioritize school and english though. It might be all about them games. Asia is notorious for teaching loads of english grammar/vocab but barely any speaking skills. They score highly in the tests but can't speak much. Most Korean progamers do not seem to have good grammar either though. "I'm exciting" is much more common than "I'm excited". Yeah it's weird because viOLet has a good speaking english but his tweets are terrible.
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On June 24 2013 03:51 rasnj wrote:Show nested quote +On June 24 2013 03:48 Derez wrote:On June 24 2013 03:41 AlternativeEgo wrote:On June 24 2013 03:37 ACrow wrote:On June 24 2013 03:34 Cheerio wrote: Does anyone know what foreign languages do they learn in korean schools? Afaik, Chinese is a little more common? But I guess they take learning a second language about as seriously as US-Americans do. It was discussed yesterday and some guy posted some statistics which showed good english score for South Korea. Don't know how the general Korean pro-gamer prioritize school and english though. It might be all about them games. Asia is notorious for teaching loads of english grammar/vocab but barely any speaking skills. They score highly in the tests but can't speak much. Most Korean progamers do not seem to have good grammar either though. "I'm exciting" is much more common than "I'm excited". that's because they are really saying they are exciting
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On June 24 2013 03:51 rasnj wrote:Show nested quote +On June 24 2013 03:48 Derez wrote:On June 24 2013 03:41 AlternativeEgo wrote:On June 24 2013 03:37 ACrow wrote:On June 24 2013 03:34 Cheerio wrote: Does anyone know what foreign languages do they learn in korean schools? Afaik, Chinese is a little more common? But I guess they take learning a second language about as seriously as US-Americans do. It was discussed yesterday and some guy posted some statistics which showed good english score for South Korea. Don't know how the general Korean pro-gamer prioritize school and english though. It might be all about them games. Asia is notorious for teaching loads of english grammar/vocab but barely any speaking skills. They score highly in the tests but can't speak much. Most Korean progamers do not seem to have good grammar either though. "I'm exciting" is much more common than "I'm excited". well, to be fair, a lot of them are very exciting 
also i'm really impressed with TLO's improvement. like half a year ago he was that guy who has a lot of fans, but whenever he showed up to a tournament nobody expected him to beat anybody decent. basically what Huk is now (well maybe not quite as bad, but you know what i mean). now he's the guy that makes at least top 8 every tournament and can compete with and even beat mid tier Koreans. good shit Dario.
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