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  2. Korean honorifics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_honorifics

    The age of each other, including the slight age difference, affects whether or not to use honorifics. Korean language speakers in South Korea and North Korea, except in very intimate situations, use different honorifics depending on whether the other person's year of birth is one year or more older, or the same year, or one year or more younger.

  3. Korean speech levels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_speech_levels

    Each Korean speech level can be combined with honorific or non-honorific noun and verb forms. Taken together, there are 14 combinations. Some of these speech levels are disappearing from the majority of Korean speech. Hasoseo-che is now used mainly in movies or dramas set in the Joseon era and in religious speech. [1]

  4. East Asian age reckoning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Asian_age_reckoning

    How the age of a Korean person, who was born on June 15, is determined by traditional and official reckoning. Traditional East Asian age reckoning covers a group of related methods for reckoning human ages practiced in the East Asian cultural sphere, where age is the number of calendar years in which a person has been alive; it starts at 1 at birth and increases at each New Year.

  5. Honorifics (linguistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honorifics_(linguistics)

    Although Korean language has very similar honorifics system to Japanese language, there are differences between Korean and Japanese. For example, in Japan, the degree of intimacy largely reflects the use of honorifics, but in Korean, age and whether the other person is of higher status than oneself is more important than the degree of intimacy.

  6. Korean pronouns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_pronouns

    Korean pronouns pose some difficulty to speakers of English due to their complexity. The Korean language makes extensive use of speech levels and honorifics in its grammar, and Korean pronouns also change depending on the social distinction between the speaker and the person or persons spoken to.

  7. South Koreans become younger overnight after country scraps ...

    www.aol.com/south-koreans-become-younger...

    More than 51 million people in South Korea awoke on Wednesday to find themselves a year or two younger – at least, according to the law. South Koreans become younger overnight after country ...

  8. Comparison of Japanese and Korean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Japanese_and...

    Both languages have similar elaborate, multilevel systems of honorifics, and furthermore both Korean and Japanese also separate the concept of honorifics from formality in speech and writing in their own ways (See Korean speech levels and Honorific speech in Japanese § Grammatical overview).

  9. Nahuatl honorifics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nahuatl_honorifics

    The system of honorifics observed for Nahuatl languages is a highly complex one, employing both free and bound morphemes that may attach to nouns, verbs, postpositions and other grammatical elements, providing a gradation of reverential address options whose use is governed by cultural and social norms within the Nahuatl speech community ...