🌐 Internet culture✂️ Abbreviation🌱 Wholesome
Spiciness
SK

🙏많관부

/manh-gwan-bu/

Short for “please give it lots of interest/support.” A casual promo phrase used when launching or sharing new content, projects, albums, events, or announcements.
많관부 meaning visual explanation
📺 Video streaming▶️ YouTubeFirst seen 2018

origin · Source

It compresses the formal Korean promo phrase “please give it lots of interest” into a short internet-friendly expression. It became common across YouTube, social media, fandoms, and online communities when creators or fans ask people to support a new video, album, project, or event.

ex)

3
  • "New video drops today. Please show it lots of love 🙏"
  • "Our team project is finally live. Please check it out!"
  • "The comeback teaser is out… please give it lots of attention and love!"

Related words you'll enjoy

ex)

"If you enjoyed the video, please like, comment, subscribe, and turn on notifications!"

📺 Video streaming▶️ YouTube2018

originThe phrase compresses the common YouTube call-to-action “like, comment, subscribe, and turn on notifications” into a short rhythmic abbreviation. As creator culture grew, it became a familiar meme-like sign-off between creators and viewers.

ex)

"As soon as my friend took one bite of the chicken, they went, “ya-reu~.”"

📺 Video streaming📱 YouTube Shorts2025

originA punchy reaction-style exclamation that spread through mukbang clips, short-form videos, and comment culture. Rather than having a strict dictionary meaning, it works as a shared meme sound for moments when the mood suddenly becomes joyful or hyped.

ex)

"Ramen with kimchi is the obvious default combo."

💬 Online community🌀 Multiple2010

originShort for 'national rule' or 'everyone’s rule,' this phrase spread through Korean online communities and social media as a playful way to describe something people treat as the obvious default. It is not an actual rule, but an unwritten standard people jokingly assume everyone follows.

ex)

"A bunch of childish kids flooded the chat and made everything chaotic."

📺 Video streaming🟣 Twitch2020

originThe term is widely understood to have come from ‘Jaemin,’ the name of a childlike TTS voice used in Korean streaming donation culture. As the voice became associated with childish, noisy, or immature chat behavior, the word evolved into ‘jaem-min-i.’ Over time, it became a teasing or derogatory label for elementary-school kids or anyone acting immature online.

ex)

"I asked if the coupon worked, got hit with a three-second Gen Z stare, and started buffering too."

🌍 Global internet culture🎵 TikTok2025

originThe term spread from English-language TikTok, where people called the blank, silent pause some Gen Z users appear to make in questions, requests, or service interactions the ‘Gen Z stare.’ In Korean, it was transliterated as ‘젠지스테어’ and became a way to describe awkward real-life silence in cafés, shops, offices, and meetings. Rather than a literal trait of all Gen Z people, it works best as a meme about generational miscommunication and social buffering.

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