Kinda who cares. Most think that capital of Australia is Sydney, while in fact it's a small town of Canberra. Seoul will keep growing no matter what you do anyway.
@@deviantd.6740 if you're implying that I'm Australian, wrong. I'm from the other hemisphere with a closest English speaking country 1700km away and 15 000km (27h+ flight) from Sydney in general. We use 2 completely different alphabets here and none of them even have letter 'Y', so excuse me. But if your citizens can't spell it, shame on them.
By 2030, Sejong City was the new official capital of the Republic of Korea (South) when government offices began relocating from its largest city in the country Seoul
If this pushes through, does it make sense that Seoul should be renamed? Since the word Seoul 서울 in Korean literally means capital city. Will Sejong City be called 서울 as well? I wanted Seoul to be renamed back to Gyeongseong so that its Hanja is the same in Kanji 京城 and in its Chinese equivalent; the Japanese will then start calling it Keijō again instead of using the hideous Katakana word ソウル and in Chinese two different and unrelated names 漢城 and 首爾. Although the problem is the Chinese/Kanji/Hanja character 京 also means 'capital' as in 東京 'eastern capital' and 北京 'northern capital.' But Nanjing 南京 does not have this problem and still has the character 'capital' in it even though it's not the capital of China.
Kinda who cares. Most think that capital of Australia is Sydney, while in fact it's a small town of Canberra. Seoul will keep growing no matter what you do anyway.
How can we expect foreigners to know that, when our own citizens can't even spell Sydney correctly.
@@deviantd.6740 if you're implying that I'm Australian, wrong. I'm from the other hemisphere with a closest English speaking country 1700km away and 15 000km (27h+ flight) from Sydney in general. We use 2 completely different alphabets here and none of them even have letter 'Y', so excuse me. But if your citizens can't spell it, shame on them.
Exactly it'll basically become new York City of Korea.
Koreans and Australians are different✌
Ndc
By 2030, Sejong City was the new official capital of the Republic of Korea (South) when government offices began relocating from its largest city in the country Seoul
Me and the boys coolin in Kumgang, North Korea
I am a Sejong citizen.
The professor on the left is actually not answering the question lmao
Ndk center bank hongkonk 37.5300 xc12 000 000 us
It makes sense to move the government away from that border
More than that probably some of the largest company should be moved there.
세종시
I can see it being moved to Sejong.
If this pushes through, does it make sense that Seoul should be renamed? Since the word Seoul 서울 in Korean literally means capital city. Will Sejong City be called 서울 as well? I wanted Seoul to be renamed back to Gyeongseong so that its Hanja is the same in Kanji 京城 and in its Chinese equivalent; the Japanese will then start calling it Keijō again instead of using the hideous Katakana word ソウル and in Chinese two different and unrelated names 漢城 and 首爾. Although the problem is the Chinese/Kanji/Hanja character 京 also means 'capital' as in 東京 'eastern capital' and 北京 'northern capital.' But Nanjing 南京 does not have this problem and still has the character 'capital' in it even though it's not the capital of China.