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💬띵언

/tting-eon/

A visual-shape internet expression meaning 명언, a famous or wise saying. It comes from the 야민정음 habit of replacing 글자 with similar-looking shapes, where 명 can be read playfully as 띵.
띵언 meaning visual explanation
💬 Online community🖥️ DCInsideFirst seen 2015

origin · Source

띵언 is part of 야민정음-style Korean internet wordplay, where similar-looking Hangul shapes are swapped for comic effect. The exact first use is hard to pin down, but it spread through online communities in the mid-2010s alongside related forms like 띵곡 and 띵작.

ex)

2
  • "That comment was actually a 띵언."
  • "This line is not just funny, it is a 띵언."

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ex)

"That comeback stage was seriously meobak."

💬 Online community🖥️ DCInside2015

originThe expression is tied to 야민정음, a Korean internet writing style that spread widely through online communities in the mid-2010s. The exact first use of 머박 is hard to pin down, but it follows the same visual-shape logic as 띵언, 머기업, and 댕댕이.

ex)

"That streamer is basically a meo-gi-eop now; the chat moves too fast to read."

💬 Online community🖥️ DCInside2010

originThe exact first use is hard to pin down, but it likely spread with early-to-mid 2010s Yaminjeongeum wordplay from DCInside-style online communities. The expression comes from visually replacing 대 in 대기업 with the similar-looking 머, then later expanded naturally to mean any large-scale online creator or channel.

ex)

"That puppy is so cute. Total 댕댕이 energy."

💬 Online community🖥️ DCInside2010

origin댕댕이 is usually linked to 야민정음, a Korean internet style that swaps letters based on visual similarity. The exact first use is hard to verify, but it likely spread from online communities in the early 2010s and later became common across social media, pet posts, and everyday casual speech.

ex)

"That puppy is seriously so cute."

💬 Online community🖥️ DCInside2010

originThe expression likely spread through 2010s Korean online communities as part of Yaminjeongeum, a meme-like habit of swapping Korean letters for visually similar ones. The exact first use is hard to pin down, but “커엽다” became one of the most recognizable soft, cute examples alongside words like “댕댕이” and “머박.”

ex)

"This is ne-mil, so do not tell anyone yet."

💬 Online community🌀 Multiple2010

originThe expression comes from 야민정음, a Korean internet writing game that swaps letters for visually similar shapes. In this case, '비' in '비밀' is replaced with the similar-looking '네', turning the ordinary word for secret into the playful form '네밀'; the exact first use is unclear, but it fits the broader early-2010s spread of shape-based community wordplay.

ex)

"I missed the concert ticketing again... 롬곡옾눞."

💬 Online community🖥️ DCInside2008

originThe expression is usually understood as part of early Korean internet visual-shape wordplay, where users distorted, rotated, or re-read Hangul for meme effect. Its exact first use is uncertain, but it spread through communities as a flipped version of 폭풍눈물, with 롬곡 roughly corresponding to 폭풍 and 옾눞 to 눈물.

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