김진오의 뉴헤어 프로젝트
blog.naver.com/newhair_blog
Latest translated post
Has the Era of 17 mg High-Dose Minoxidil Arrived? Veradermics Clinical Trial
Latest post date
May 8, 2026
Translated at
May 8, 2026
English archive
This clinic-level English archive groups translated Naver Blog posts by source and by publish date, so we can surface English-searchable archive pages without changing the original Korean source flow.
Source blogs
1
Clinic-linked Naver Blog sources with at least one successful English translation.
Translated posts
476
English archive entries currently available for this clinic.
Latest translation
May 8, 2026
Most recent translation timestamp visible for this clinic archive.
Source directory
Open a source archive when you want to scan one clinic blog in chronological order, then step into translated detail pages only where needed.
blog.naver.com/newhair_blog
Latest translated post
Has the Era of 17 mg High-Dose Minoxidil Arrived? Veradermics Clinical Trial
Latest post date
May 8, 2026
Translated at
May 8, 2026
Translated posts
Showing posts 341 to 360. The English layer only includes posts with successful stored translations.
“It could come off as ~” literally means “it could seem like ~.” It is mainly used when someone’s tone, attitude, or presentation style might unintentionally cause misunderstanding...
The clinic room door opened quietly. A man who looked to be in his early 40s came in. He had neatly trimmed short hair and a tidy appearance, but there was some hesitation in his e...
“You’d better ~” means “it would be better to ~,” and it carries a stronger nuance of recommendation or warning than a simple suggestion. It is especially often used in meetings, a...
It’s not only humans who experience hair loss; dogs can too. If you live with a dog, you may have worried at least once about shedding problems. In particular, once the hair starts...
‘It’s a matter of~’ is an English expression often used to convey that something is “ultimately a matter of ~” or that “the essence is ~.” In academic presentations, discussions, a...
These days, there is a question I often hear from patients in the exam room. It is, “Doctor, do I have to take this hair loss medication for the rest of my life?” Whenever I he...
‘Happen to’ is often used in English with the nuance of “to end up doing something by chance,” “to happen to be,” or “by any chance.” It is especially useful at academic meetings o...
When people talk about hair loss, that guy DHT always comes up. It sounds a bit like a delivery company name, or maybe the name of a component found in tuna. This substance is the...
"Have come a long way" literally means "to have come a long distance," but in English it is often used to mean that a person, thing, research, technology, and so on has made major...
Melatonin is widely known as a sleep aid and is easy to get through overseas direct purchase. But did you know that melatonin may also affect hair health? I have taken melatonin my...
‘very’ is often used not only to mean ‘very,’ but also to mean ‘right that ~,’ ‘exactly that ~,’ or ‘precisely that ~.’ In particular, expressions like the very beginning, the very...
Why are TV protagonists always so full-haired? Even these days, when you watch TV, it is easy to see that people with thick hair still tend to take on the role of the protagonist....
“Just the” is used in specific situations or contexts to mean ‘exactly that’ or ‘that’s exactly it,’ and it appears often not only in everyday conversation but also in academic pre...
A female patient in her 40s whom I met in the clinic had finished cancer treatment six months earlier, but she cautiously told me that her hair still had not come back. “Could it b...
"get away with" means to avoid punishment after doing something problematic or making a mistake, to get off lightly, or to slip by unnoticed. At academic conferences, it is often u...
“Please have a seat, and let me take a look in the mirror once.” The consultation began with a phrase I often use in the exam room. The patient said he had been struggling with hai...
The English expression "pull off" is often used to mean successfully accomplishing something that seems impossible or difficult at first glance. Although it is not formal, it is...
Recently, I came across a paper about research aimed at clarifying the relationship between hair loss and depression. In fact, in clinics and hospitals, I often meet patients who r...
“for a change” is an everyday expression used to mean things like “something a little different this time,” “just for a change of pace,” or “to do things differently for once.” It...
Research on hair loss continues to advance day by day, but many patients still ask questions like: "When will my hair grow back?" and "Do hair loss medications really work?" A stud...