A late-'90s track where the crew pledges to be someone's angel, their strength, their everything.
neo eui nim ee dwe joo get seo
Y.G. Family's "Sweet Love" came out in the late 1990s, part of that era when Korean hip-hop crews were building their own sound. The lyric is a straightforward vow, repeated and layered, about becoming someone's protector and source of happiness.
The phrase "neo eui nim ee dwe joo get seo", I will become your angel, gets said over and over. It's less a romantic promise and more a declaration of duty, like someone signing up for a job that never ends. The words answer a simple, deep pressure: to be the solid thing someone else can lean on, completely.
It's the core promise, repeated like a mantra. In plain speech, it means 'I've got you, no matter what,' and the song builds its whole world around that single, unwavering offer.
For all the "thank you"s and "I always love you"s, the lyric feels less like a love song and more like a loyalty oath. It's about assuming a role, your strength, your happiness, and holding that line, which in hip-hop crew terms is its own kind of devotion.
The way "cheon sa neun ah reum tap da" (angels are beautiful) gets tossed in, almost like a boast, then immediately snaps back to the pledge. It's a quick, proud gesture before returning to work.
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