I have Western people shoe size, which means in the EU I will be size 41, in the UK 7-7.5, which recently I discovered it is size 265-270 in Korea.. a size that even online I found was difficult to get, and with the 주운 날씨가 I had to get some new boots.. Finally 🙌🏼 새 부츠 있어요 🤗 Here are a few idioms (한국어: 은유? 🤔) in English regarding to walking: • "you have to step up your game" = you need to do better • "step up to the occasion" can also be said "taking the extra mile", which pretty much used in the same situations, when someone is really difficult, yet the person or group made the effort and successfully proved they can do the task. • "I wouldn't want to be in your shoes" = it seems like you are facing a really difficult situation and I don't know what could I have done, to deal with the situation if I were you, therefore I prefer to not be you under the circumstances. In general when the term "being in someone shoes" is used, it refers to empathize and think "if it was me instead of them" • "you are walking on thin ice" = you are doing something quite risky, which might end up with a really bad ending. • "Just walk it off" = when a situation really bothers someone that they cannot stop thinking and\or talking about it and they are really annoyed, you can say it to them instead of saying "relax" or "try to think about something else".. Although, be careful with the tone you use on the last one, since if you use it in the wrong way it can sound condescending, which might make that person even more angry (**added a voice not for example**) Any fun idioms in Korean related to steps or walking or shoes or something along those lines? ("along those lines" = similar to that)