| >> | No.44302028 There are different levels of prostitution, from straight up whore to coffee "delivery girls" to room salon girls.
The lowest are the prostitutes who usually have a pimp connected to the local mafia. You'll see these cards outside motels with pictures of busty girls on them and a phone number. The number goes to the pimps office where he has a girl acting as a dispatcher, tell her your motel and room number and within 30m a girl knocks at your door. The price is split between her and her pimp with the motel getting a kickback.
Then there are massage girls at places called Anma's. You go in, pay the cost and it's basically pampering for guys that ends with her rubbing her tits all over you, giving you a blowjob and then fucking you.
Room salon girls are like the call girls only instead of sitting at their apartment doing schoolwork waiting for their service to call them, they are actually working at a private room bar. It's a place with multiple rooms that have a big table, karaoke machine, music and couches. You order a set of alcohol and food and pay for the girls time to sit down and pour drinks / talk / ect. These girls are encouraged to sleep with you, but aren't obligated to, and the money is split with the establishment.
You have the "drinking" call girls, they are the most common. Their job is to sit down next to you and pour your drinks, talk with you, sing, dance / ect. They get paid by the hour with the money being split between her, her call service and possibly the establishment your at. Sex is something you negotiate with her separately and it'll be much higher then the prostitute. She is not obligated to sleep with you and is basically a paid-by-the-hour girlfriend. |
| >> | No.44302680 >>44302601 I can offer some advice for Korean if you want. I am currently studying Korean (I consider myself Intermediate-Advanced) and Mandarin Chinese.
Here's my advice for learning Korean self-study:
Ok I recommend using Talktominkorean.com's Grammar Curriculum. The PDFs are very clear.
I just found this textbook a little while back. It's free and seems good: http://culturequote.files.wordpress.com/2013/03/basic-korean-a-grammar-and-workbook.pdf
There is also an intermediate version available.
My first textbook for Korean was actually this one: http://www.amazon.com/Integrated-Korean-Beginning-Textbooks-Language/dp/0824834402
I personally like it a lot and find it very clear, practical, and simple, but I will note it's highly geared towards college students so the vocabulary you learn from it would be mostly college words (dorm, cafeteria, classroom...)
Note also that this is out there: http://www.howtostudykorean.com/ but I don't recommend simply because the teacher is not a native speaker and makes that clear. He says many times "This is how my Korean friend says it, so this must be right." It's good when I have questions, but I wouldn't recommend it as a source at all.
Lastly, when you have a firm grasp of grammar, translating Kpop songs is fun. It helps keep the language in your head because the lyrics are catchy. I used to translate songs where the Korean was very clear, often 2ne1 songs but it's up to you and movies are a good supplement but none of that replaces study from the workbooks above.
Frankly, besides asking my Korean professor, tutor, and friends, when I have questions I just use Google. I've learned a lot of Korean just by typing questions on Google. |