Anonymous wrote:My Korean friend married a black man during the pandemic earlier this year and I’ll see her for the first time since 2020, on Friday. What is a little gift I can give her/them that is appropriate in her culture? She’s a rich lawyer and I’m … not. It’s more important that it’s symbolic than expensive. I just want her to feel my support, partly because her parents won’t acknowledge him, and partly because they chose to just get married at city hall, no celebration or anything. Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:A pair of Korean mandarin duck carvings. They are a very traditional Korean wedding gift and there is a lot of meaning behind them.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wedding_ducks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A set of soju glasses
Korean dinnerware, chopsticks/spoon sets, banchan bowls
Dolset soup/stew stone bowls
Aah please don’t give your Korean friend chopsticks for her wedding gift
Anonymous wrote:Did you read the OP? He's Black. I'd just go off her wedding registry. That's what she really wants.Anonymous wrote:What ethnicity is the new husband?
Anonymous wrote:A set of soju glasses
Korean dinnerware, chopsticks/spoon sets, banchan bowls
Dolset soup/stew stone bowls
Okay, yes technically that is correct. But honestly, as Americans when someone asks about ethnicity they typically mean Black, White, Asian, etc.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you read the OP? He's Black. I'd just go off her wedding registry. That's what she really wants.Anonymous wrote:What ethnicity is the new husband?
Are you dense? Black is not an ethnicity. Examples of Black ethnicities include African American, Afro Caribbean, British West Indian, and many, many others.
Anonymous wrote:Did you read the OP? He's Black. I'd just go off her wedding registry. That's what she really wants.Anonymous wrote:What ethnicity is the new husband?
Did you read the OP? He's Black. I'd just go off her wedding registry. That's what she really wants.Anonymous wrote:What ethnicity is the new husband?