Vind Engels Leerkrachten
gggse123
question
"It made out of Korea."
means "It made in korea." ?
14 mrt. 2019 14:01
Antwoorden · 2
1
When you say "A is made out of B" it means A is made from B, B is used as a material for making A, B is transformed into A. For example: "People used to live in tents made out of animal skin".
When you say "A is made in B" it means that B is the place where A is made. For example: "A lot of stuff is made in China these days"
So "it is made in Korea" means that something is created in Korea, while "It is made out of Korea" wouldn't make sense.
Hope this helps.
14 maart 2019
1
Yes. "Made in Korea" is the correct - although not literal - translation.
It's probably a literal translation from the original Korean.
I think I read somewhere that "KIA" means "coming out of Asia", so the original Korean text was probably "coming out of Korea", which is not how we represent the origin of a foreign-made product in English. We typically say, "made in <insert country>".
14 maart 2019
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!
gggse123
Taalvaardigheden
Chinees (Mandarijn), Engels, Koreaans
Taal die wordt geleerd
Chinees (Mandarijn), Engels
Artikelen die je misschien ook leuk vindt

The Power of Storytelling in Business Communication
39 likes · 9 Opmerkingen

Back-to-School English: 15 Must-Know Phrases for the Classroom
28 likes · 6 Opmerkingen

Ten Tourist towns in Portugal that nobody remembers
55 likes · 22 Opmerkingen
Meer artikelen