My wife is South Korean (from andong). I asked her and she looked at me like I'd grown a second head "because it's South Korea? We're a young country and that is tiny airport in the south, half of Korea is a safety hazard and you know that fine well, some freaking idiot put a wall there, oh well, it's korea" and walked off pretty angry I'd even asked.
Oh I'm fully aware, I take no issue with her ire, just didn't expect that answer, tho I should have. To her point, the South of South Korea, especially in the country area, has loads of stuff like this, there are disasters waiting to happen everywhere, much of the infrastructure should be gone through with a fine tooth comb really, like this still both boggles my mind and boils my blood: https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/fire-south-korean...
They used a HIGHLY flammable material to completely cover a raised highway.
(All of that said, I read from so many people now that the plane would have disintegrated once it did finally start to drag given the speed, and there is another parameter wall shortly after the berm.)
"One strategy I use for my relationships with foreigners is to gently pat them on their heads if they understand me. That way, there is positive reinforcement and they are encouraged to improve their understanding." - this may very well be one of the most condescending and disrespectful things I've read on hackernews ever. Also, my wife has a PhD in American History from Yale and teaches at SUNY, I don't suspect she misunderstood the question.
>Tell her she is wrong. It's an international airport with commercial traffic. 11th most busiest airport in the country.[0]
11th out of 15 total, servicing about 4 flights / 630 passengers per day on average using the very same statistics you've linked. That sounds like a pretty small airport to me, both in absolute and relative terms.
"International airport" means very little outside of large nations like the US, Russia, Canada, Brazil or China. Most nations are small enough that there's at least as many foreign airports within a few hundred kilometers as there are domestic ones, and therefore every airport may as well be an international airport.
"International airport" means very little outside of large nations like the US, Russia, Canada, Brazil or China.
In the U. S., at least, "international" just means there's a customs station. There are some pretty small airports that have "international" in the name. Fairbanks, Alaska, comes to mind.
That's a great observation about 'international airport'. There is no point in mincing words regarding the definition of 'tiny'. I think you've correctly characterized the size of the airport.