BAE173 keep us busy! After the tender “Just One Day”, they now show another side with “What’s Wrong?” (왜이러니). This time it’s not about hopeful confessions, but a relationship that has already cracked—and the retro 80s dance beat makes the heartbreak sting even more.
Let’s check this pleading line:
“사랑해 좋아해 이제 내게 말해 바보야”
“I love you, I like you—now tell me already: I’m a fool.”
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📘 Key Phrases to Learn
1️⃣ 사랑해 – I love you
• From 사랑하다 = to love
• -해 = casual present tense (from 하다)
👉 A direct, intimate “I love you” in 반말 (casual speech).
2️⃣ 좋아해 – I like you / I love you (romantic context)
• From 좋아하다 = to like, to be fond of
👉 In romantic lyrics, often used interchangeably with “사랑해” but a bit lighter in nuance.
3️⃣ 이제 내게 말해 – Tell me now
• 이제 = now
• 내게 = to me (내 = my/me + -게 = to)
• 말해 = say it / tell me (from 말하다)
👉 Literally “Now, say it to me.” A demand rather than a soft request.
4️⃣ 바보야 – You fool / idiot
• 바보 = fool, idiot
• -야 = vocative ending (used to call someone casually)
👉 Commonly used in love songs not as a harsh insult, but a frustrated, affectionate scolding.
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💡 Grammar Tip:
Notice the use of 해체 (casual speech) throughout: 사랑해, 좋아해, 말해, 바보야. This ending form (-해) makes it feel raw and unfiltered, like words spilling out in frustration rather than a polished confession.
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💬 Why It Matters:
With just one sentence, the lyric blends deep love (사랑해), lingering affection (좋아해), frustration (말해!), and scolding (바보야). That’s the whole emotional rollercoaster of a failing relationship condensed into four short phrases.
⚡ Do you prefer BAE173’s softer side (Just One Day) or their raw, frustrated side (What’s Wrong?)? Drop a 🎧 and let me know!