Sino-Korean
Etymology Adjective
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Etymology Adjective
Sino-Korean (not comparable)
- Of or pertaining both to China and to Korea; being both Chinese and Korean.
- the state of Sino-Korean relations
- (specifically, linguistics, of a Korean word) Etymologically borrowed or otherwise derived from an eighth-century dialect of Middle Chinese which greatly influenced the Korean language.
- Until the fifteenth century, Koreans had a native word for the numeral "hundred", but it has since been replaced by a Sino-Korean word.
- French: sino-coréen
- German: sino-koreanisch
- Italian: sinocoreano
- Russian: кита́йско-коре́йский
- Spanish: sinocoreano
- French: sino-coréen
Sino-Korean (uncountable)
- The elements in the Korean language derived from the said dialect of Middle Chinese:
- The Korean vocabulary borrowed or otherwise derived from the said dialect.
- The distinctive Korean pronunciation of Chinese characters, which is an adaptation of the pronunciation of the said dialect into Korean phonology.
- French: sino-coréen
This text is extracted from the Wiktionary and it is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license | Terms and conditions | Privacy policy 0.004
