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What Does “Hwaiting” Mean?

Confusing slang in
Hwaiting
interjection · Korean slang
translates to
Plain English out

"You can do it!" — Korea's all-purpose cheer of encouragement.

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The full meaning

Hwaiting (also spelled "fighting") is a cheer of encouragement meaning "good luck," "you've got this," or "let's go." Koreans say it before exams, interviews, matches, and hard days, often with a raised fist.

Where “hwaiting” comes from

A Korean adaptation of the English word "fighting," reshaped by Korean pronunciation and given a completely positive meaning that the English word never had. K-dramas made it internationally famous.

How it’s actually used

Said to others as support ("exam tomorrow? Hwaiting!") or to yourself as a pep talk. Fans of K-content use it in English sentences as natural encouragement.

Big interview today. Hwaiting, you've prepared for this!
She texted me hwaiting with three fist emojis before the match.
Last week of the semester, everyone. Hwaiting.
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✔ For parents & teachers

Despite deriving from the word fighting, it has nothing to do with violence. It's pure encouragement, the Korean equivalent of "you've got this."

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Last updated: 2026-07-06. Slang evolves fast — we review definitions regularly.