AtHeart: Shut Up – Knowing what they want

AtHeart made their first comeback last week with the single ‘Shut Up’ after their debut EP last summer. The song is cute and fun, matching their concept, but it has a small ‘Plot Twist’.

The girls know exactly what they want and how to get it. They simply tell the boy to ‘Shut Up’ and give up. These lines exemplify this:

너 도망가도 전혀 타격감 없어

괜찮아 전부 after

But 괜한 딴소리 마

“Even if you run away, it doesn’t affect me at all.

It’s fine — everything comes after.

But don’t talk nonsense.”

Vocabulary & grammar breakdown

1. 너 도망가도 전혀 타격감 없어

  • = “you”
  • 도망가다 = “to run away”
  • –아/어도 = “even if”
  • 전혀 = “not at all” (used with negatives)
  • 타격감 = “impact / sense of being hit”
  • 없어 = “there isn’t”

→ Pattern: verb + –아/어도 + negative

= “even if (you do), it doesn’t…”

2. 괜찮아 전부 after

  • 괜찮아 = “it’s okay / I’m fine”
  • 전부 = “everything / all of it”
  • after = English loanword

→ Korean sentence + English noun for stylistic effect.

3. 괜한 딴소리 마

  • 괜한 = “unnecessary / pointless”
  • 딴소리 = “irrelevant talk / nonsense”
  • = shortened imperative from 말다 (“don’t”)

→ Full form: 딴소리 하지 마

= “Don’t talk nonsense.”

4. Negative imperative (–지 마 / 마)

  • –지 마 = “don’t do (something)”

In lyrics, often shortened to after a noun phrase

→ Very common in casual or strong tone speech.

How do you like AtHeart’s comeback. Does it live up to their debut or is it maybe a bit too generic?

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