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  2. Sino-Korean vocabulary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-Korean_vocabulary

    Sino-Korean vocabulary or Hanja-eo (Korean: 한자어; Hanja: 漢字 語) refers to Korean words of Chinese origin. Sino-Korean vocabulary includes words borrowed directly from Chinese, as well as new Korean words created from Chinese characters, and words borrowed from Sino-Japanese vocabulary. Many of these terms were borrowed during the ...

  3. Korean count word - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_count_word

    The Korean language uses special measure or counting words for specific objects and events. [ 1 ] These suffixes are called subullyusa (수분류사 ; 數分類詞) in Korean. They are similar to the ones employed in the Chinese and the Japanese languages. In English it is "two sheets of paper", not "two papers". Analogously, in Korean jang ...

  4. Korean language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_language

    The Sino-Korean words were deliberately imported alongside corresponding Chinese characters for a written language and everything was supposed to be written in Hanja, so the coexistence of Sino-Korean would be more thorough and systematic than that of Latinate words in English. The exact proportion of Sino-Korean vocabulary is a matter of debate.

  5. History of Sino-Korean relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Sino-Korean...

    Most premodern Korean historians after that accepted that Jizi had replaced another indigenous power (represented by Dangun) in Old Joseon. [ 6 ] Nonetheless, the Jizi Mythology plays a defining role in explaining the pre-modern relationship between Korea and China. In 194 BC, Wei Man, a Chinese general from Yan state, sought refugee along with ...

  6. Korean grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_grammar

    The Sino-Korean system is nearly entirely based on the Chinese numerals. The distinction between the two numeral systems is very important. Everything that can be counted will use one of the two systems, but seldom both. The grouping of large numbers in Korean follows the Chinese tradition of myriads (10,000) rather than thousands (1,000) as is ...

  7. Old Korean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Korean

    Old Korean is generally defined as the ancient Koreanic language of the Silla state (BCE 57–CE 936), [3] especially in its Unified period (668–936). [4] [5] Proto-Koreanic, the hypothetical ancestor of the Koreanic languages understood largely through the internal reconstruction of later forms of Korean, [6] is to be distinguished from the actually historically attested language of Old Korean.

  8. Chinese numerals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_numerals

    In spoken Cantonese 卌; sei3can be used in place of 四十when followed by another digit such as in numbers 41–49, a measure word (e.g. 卌個), a noun, or in phrases like 卌幾'forty-something', it is not used by itself to mean 40. When spoken, 卌is pronounced as 卌呀; sei3-aa6. Thus 卌一; 41, is pronounced as sei3-aa6-jat1.

  9. 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.