kimchiandsoju wrote:More specifically I mean in a restaurant or shop. At one point I thought it was something you say as you leave a restaurant/shop to whoever was working there, but then I got the feeling that people were looking at me funny. I swear some people even laughed. Then I started thinking that I was saying it wrong and got really paranoid and stopped saying it all together.
Do you say it when you go in a restaurant? Before you leave?
I feel like I should know this, so I've always been kind of emberassed to ask but in 10 or so years I still haven't figured it out so somebody please clue me in.
THX.
p.s. 수고 하세요.
Before I answer you should maybe know that I started learning Korean in Korean school where (at least in my classes...) they taught me little to nothing about grammar (that's why I never managed to figure it out back then haha).
I always thought "하세요" was an imperative because I only heard it when it was used as an imperative. Now I know that it's just honorific but when I think about it I only ever hear "하세요" as an imperative or in questions "....하세요?".
So I could be totally wrong but maybe when you say 수고 하세요 while leaving it sounds as if you tell them to do their best (too late for that).
IMHO the correct version would be to say 수고 하셨어요 (You did a great job/You made a lot of effort/You did your best/You worked well) in the past tense.
Maybe you can say 수고 하세요 BEFORE someone actually starts working.
Or maybe when leaving you could say something like "앞으로도 수고 하세요!"
Something like "From now on give your best, too (like you did before)"
Also, I guess, it can be maybe not totally appropriate in some situations. Say, you enter a grocery store, select your items, pay and say the phrase...
Just selling something to you doesn't involve much effort. Likewise, if you're at McDonalds and buy a hamburger and say the phrase afterwards it's not really something where you have to appreciate the hard, dedicated work either.
By the way, did you know what the phrase means? Or did you just know that people say it when they enter/leave shops/restaunrants?
But I'm not 100% sure about all this... a big part of my Korean """skills""" is based on feelings and often enough my feelings fool me
So let's hear the experts on this.