A Korean ballad about letting someone go while still holding on to the feeling.
Most breakup songs are about the singer's pain.
This one keeps turning back to the other person's face, their smile seen through the singer's tears.
A Korean ballad about letting someone go while still holding on to the feeling.
A Korean ballad about letting someone go while still holding on to the feeling.
Most breakup songs are about the singer's pain.
This one keeps turning back to the other person's face, their smile seen through the singer's tears.
A Korean ballad about letting someone go while still holding on to the feeling.
Mianhae geudongan neol himdeulge haeseo
Most breakup songs are about the singer's pain. This one keeps turning back to the other person's face, their smile seen through the singer's tears. The lyric fixates on that image, 'Naui nunmul sairo neoui useumi boyeo', as if watching happiness happen at a distance is the only honest thing left.
The phrase 'Mianhae geudongan neol himdeulge haeseo', 'I'm sorry for making you suffer all this time', doesn't ask for forgiveness. It just states the damage. The whole song circles that admission, the weight of knowing your love was someone else's burden. Even the wish for their happiness sounds like a punishment you're giving yourself.
It's a blunt admission, no decoration. The apology isn't for leaving, but for the whole time before that, the love itself became the problem.
The way the Korean phrase 'saranghae' repeats, almost like a habit the singer can't break even when the relationship is over.
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The lyric stays readable and compact here; the note and related paths sit nearby so you do not lose the song while looking for context.
eoddeongeoni neoneun gwaenchanheun gabwa
Naman ajigdo ireohge himdeureo hanabwa
Jeogi boineun neoui eolgul joheun il ineunji
Naui nunmul sairo neoui useumi boyeo
haengboghani nareul ddeonagan huro
saenggaghaebomyeon nan byeollo jal haejun ge eobseo
Ijen ni gyeote geu nungunga
Naega motjunhaengbog naega motdahan sarang neol wihae jugejiman
saranghae ajigdo nan neo hanamaneul
Saranghae barabol su bakken eobtjiman saranghae
Nagteun geon da ijeodo dwae
Niga haengboghan geollo saraisseojun geollo dwaesseunikka
Ireongeoni jeongmal sarangiran ge
Niga geuriwo ulgido cham manhi ureosseo
Cheoeumen ddeonan neol wonmanghamyeo
Nae gyeoti animyeon bulhaenghaejil goerago baran jeogdo ijiman
Saranghae ajigdo nan neo hanamaneul
Saranghae barabol su bakken eobtjiman
Saranghae nagateun geon da ijeodo dwae
Niga haengboghan geollo saraisseojun geollo dwaesseunikka
Ijeoyahagji neol wihaeseoramyeon
Ol su eobtneun neol, ol ri eobtneun neol
Eojjeomyeon jigeumdo nan gidarinabwa
Mianhae geudongan neol himdeulge haeseo
Mianhae babocheoreom geuriwo haeseo
Mianhae geuraeyaman sal geot gateunde
Neoui dwieseorado honja ireohgerado saranghalge
A Korean ballad about letting someone go while still holding on to the feeling. Most breakup songs are about the singer's pain. This one keeps turning back to the other person's face, their smile seen through the singer's tears.
K.Will performs "Sarang Huyujeung", and this lyric page sits inside the K.Will catalog on LyroVerse.
Yes. The page carries the LyroVerse editor's note "K.Will's apology for a love that couldn't stay", followed by the full lyric and related songs.
Yes. The related section below points to Those Days and Love is Punishment with a short reason for opening each page next.
Use the artist link near the top of the page or the related paths section below to keep moving through K.Will's lyric pages.
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