Haerin is definitely the best in dancing, but all of them are great dancers though. Its just that even the other members do think Haerin is the best and if i remember it correctly they once said that Haerin got some crazy footwork
Not really... Hanni is the best dancer of the group.... Footwork is one aspect of dance... Hanni is better at foundations ( if u don't know foundations - that's groove, isolations, pops, locks, body coordination nd control etc) nd she also shows potential in dynamics nd musicality which haerin still needs to work on. But I'm sure all of them will develop even more going forward. Anyway, this is their skill level right now but in future a lot may change.
wasn't Hanni? the people who always notice it are freestylers because she usually don't leave a beat in dance EG: When she does the WADADA the girl didn't leave a single beat there compared to all as if Ador snatched someone from YGX studio She's the only one who travels a meter far from the group always without anyone noticing unless you watched it couple times. as dances like a freestyler while Haerin does the same but she has the "swag" it barely noticeable about the two because they do move the same, it just the height difference why Haerin stands out the most also you won't see Hanni flexibilities unless she wears tight clothes. None of this matter who is the best because their performance director is letting them involved with the choreography. Whenever you see their moves break and suddenly give different gestures, expect that it was the girls who added most of it. I think the one who stood up the most this time is Hyein as she moves almost identical to Hanni like she's catching up literally (i based it on their recent performance in Japan fashion show that her attitude and gesture were revamped multiple times as if Hanni presence in her body) I Love all of them after all they're One New jeans.
@@unknownname231 Hyein looks stiff ngl, Dani and Minji are lacking something which I cant comprehend but Hanni and Haerin are the Main Dancers if they have conformed positions. First freestyle and swag goes to Hanni, those exaggerated(idk if that is the correct term) moves got me looking and for Haerin if you're looking for hip hop ,precise and detailed movement for sure she got that one. And no hate to Hyein but we cant base her dancing capability if just for one performance but in vocal shes more probably higher than HN and HR.
one of the reason haerin so great at dancing is her timing is perfect. she looks so organized, not in a rush nor too slow. its like she has built in metronome in her head
I do agree that Haerin is the best dancer in NJ. But there is something about Danielle looking like she's having the time of her life dancing that just gets me
The ㅐ (ae) in 해린 (haerin) is not supposed to be dragged out as heyyrin, it's just a short ae like in apple, the ㄹ (r) is not supposed to be rolled as heyyruin, it's just a short rah sound like in ramyeon. And 헤인 (hein) is not pronounced hey-in, while the romaja is HYEIN, the actual spelling is ㅎ (h) ㅔ(e) 이 (i) ㄴ (n), which is just read as is like the other names, for emphasis it sounds like heyn in Latin characters.
@Emily S no not really, I speak hangeul so I am fairly aware of what I'm saying, a lot of people watched a really trash video titled a guide to newjeans and started following what they said there, my explanation is accurate and actually the way you pronounce the syllables.
@@castdrian not saying you don't, it's the English examples that you are giving that are confusing me. While I'm not fluent in the language, I do know how to read it. You said the ㅐ (ae) in Haerin is short like the word apple. But the a in apple is not read like the (ae) in Haerin. Haerin is read like the words date or table. Also I know ㄹ is read like a L and a R combined. I don't roll it, but it is depicted by certain tongue placement which may sound rolled if I don't think about how I'm saying. That's why most of the time I say it with a hard r. With Hyein, saying hey-in and saying and ㅎ (h) ㅔ (eh) - in are the same thing because when you say the word hey, you don't emphasize the Y. You honestly don't even hear it. Now hey-in and hey-yin are different, so if you meant hey-yin, I get what you're saying there. This is where my confusion lies.
@Emily S I don't know where you learnt to read hangeul but you should reconsider the class you took ㅐ really does not sound like "ey" which is how you say date "day-tuh", it sounds exactly like it is spelt phonetically, ae, which is an umlaut in most Germanic languages as well (æ, ä), they is no y sound you pronounce while saying it. Regarding 허인 I think you overread a tiny bit, granted my fault for the information overload, but the gist of what I'm saying is that you say both syllables without a pause. there is no "in" sound that is separated from a "hey" sound, it is "heyn" (heynuh) not "hey-in" as the syllables are concatenated
@@castdrian if ae is pronounced as an umlaut then why is aespa spelled 에스파 which is a digraph. Wouldn't they be spelled the same based off of what you are telling me? I'm going to leave you with this because somebody else on a different video explained it to me and I got it from them. Thanks though.