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Original video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AtwIt8I_8VE&t=67s

Files

All Night SKZ Ep2.mkv

This is "All Night SKZ Ep2.mkv" by Kpop Auntie on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who love them.

Comments

Cassandra Leigh

I'm sure i could very easily cook in the kitchen with one member of skz... but as soon as there is more than one of them i dont think i would be able to handle the chaos hahaha.

Katja van den Berg

No matter how many times I see this, I still can't stop laughing through it. Seungmin trying to eat the fried egg, Changbin insisting on doing the eggs because apparently that's one thing he can do after all these years, talk about his mum being proud of him because of this haha. Chan's leadership skills. I'd actually missed that hand on Felix's back and Felix responding to it by behaving. Yeah, it's small touches with Chan. So funny. Hehehe oregano. I love the English language. I really do. But sometimes you guys just confuse me. THe difference in pronunciation between British English and American English. And then the Canadians take some things from the Brits (the u in words like labour), but others from American Enlish. There's the Aussies with their things. Etc. I think you all just love to confuse non-native speakers lol. But yeah oregano with the "ga" stressed is how the British say it. I'm sure people pointed that out in the Youtube comments.

K-pop Auntie

Worcestershire sauce is another one that gets me. It's supposed to be pronounced wo-shuh-shr. I don't care lol I prefer to pronounce every syllable as it's printed. Wor-ces-ter-shire. Makes it a fun word. Speaking of Canadians, we have a fun regional accent in Michigan that not many know of. True natives of the Upper Peninsula sound French Canadian mixed with Scandinavian and of Northern England. My friend Dan was from there and insisted that his name was pronounced Den. They pronounce both the o and u in diphthongs, say 'yah' instead of 'yes', 'da' instead of 'the', and most famously use 'eh' as in interrogative at the end of a sentence. "Are you going to the store?" sounds like "Yo-u go-een ta da store, eh?" It's a little hidden treasure of the English dialect.