Everything about Sino-korean Vocabulary totally explained
Sino-Korean or
hanja-eo refers to the set of words in the
Korean language vocabulary that originated from or were influenced by the
Chinese language. The Sino-Korean lexicon consists of both words
coined in the Korean language using
Chinese characters and words that were borrowed directly from the
Chinese language.
Sino-Korean words are one of the three main types of vocabulary in Korean. The other two are native Korean words and foreign words imported from other languages, mostly from
English.
Although Sino-Korean words today make up about 60% of the Korean vocabulary
, many Sino-Korean words have been replaced in
North Korea with native Korean words. However, there are still a large number of such words in widespread usage in the North.
A list of differences:
Sino-Korean vocabulary
Much like Japanese, a great deal of Sino-Korean
vocabulary was directly borrowed from Chinese. However, a small number of Sino-Korean words were coined by the Koreans themselves. Furthermore, many academic and scientific terms were borrowed from
Japanese, which had created a large body of
Sino-Japanese terms by coining or reusing Chinese words to translate Western terminology (mainly
English and
German). Under the Japanese annexation, this vocabulary was borrowed into Korean by systematically reading the characters with Korean pronunciations.
Although most
hanja-eo have the same meanings as their Chinese cognates, there are cases where the Korean meaning is different from the Chinese. This is due to various causes, including divergence of Korean meanings from Chinese, Korean coinage of new words, or borrowing from Japanese. The table below contains some words that are different between Chinese and Korean, although speakers of either language might be able to guess at the meanings from the written form (bracketed words are
Simplified Chinese characters, while those beside are the
Traditional Chinese equivalent):
| English |
Korean (in hanja) |
Korean (in hangul) |
Chinese |
| letter |
便紙, 片紙 |
편지 (pyeonji) |
信/信函/書箋/信箋/信件/便條/便信 |
| tissue |
休紙 |
휴지 (hyuji) |
草紙/棉紙/手紙/紙巾/衛生紙(卫生纸) |
| gift |
膳物 |
선물 (seonmul) |
禮物/贈品(礼物/赠品) |
| tab (in a restaurant or bar) |
外上 |
외상 (oesang) |
賬單/小報/標簽(账单/小报/标签) |
| dining table |
食卓 |
식탁 (siktak) |
餐桌/飯桌(饭桌) |
| cheque |
手票 |
수표 (supyo) |
支票 |
| name card, business card |
名啣 |
명함 (myeongham) |
名片 |
| maid |
食母 |
식모 (sigmo) |
女傭/女僕(女佣/女仆) |
| prohibit, cancel |
休止 |
휴지 (hyuji) |
取締/阻止/禁止/取消 |
| study |
工夫 |
공부 (gongbu) |
學習(学习) |
| extremely |
大端 |
대단 (daedan) |
非常/十分/忒 |
| airport |
空港 |
공항 (gonghang) |
機場(机场)/空港/航空港 |
| airplane |
飛行機 |
비행기 (bihaenggi) |
飛機(飞机) |
| president |
大統領 |
대통령 (daetongnyeong) |
總統(总统) |
| prisoner |
囚人 |
수인 (suin) |
囚犯/囚徒 |
| side room |
舍廊, 斜廊 |
사랑 (sarang) |
側房/側廳(侧厅)/旁廳/側廊 |
Some Sino-Korean words derive from Japanese
kun'yomi words, that is, native Japanese words written in Chinese characters. When borrowed into Korean, the characters are given Sino-Korean pronunciations. (Note that in Japanese, these words are not considered to belong to the Sino-Japanese part of the vocabulary as they're native Japanese words.)
| English |
Japanese |
Korean (in hanja) |
Korean (in hangul) |
Chinese term |
| assemble |
組み立て |
組立 |
조립 |
組合(组合) |
| kumi-tate |
jo.rip |
zǔhé |
| building |
建物 |
建物 |
건물 |
建築物/樓宇 (建筑物/楼宇) |
| tate-mono |
geon.mul |
jiànzhùwù/lóuyǔ |
| estimate |
見積もり |
見積 |
견적 |
估計 |
| mi-tsumori |
gyeon.jeok |
gūjì |
| share of stock |
株式 |
株式 |
주식 |
股份 |
| kabu-shiki |
ju.sik |
gǔfèn |
| match |
試合 |
試合 |
시합 |
比賽 |
| shi-ai |
si.hap |
bǐsài |
| procedure |
手続き |
手續 |
수속 |
程序 / 手續(手续) |
| te-tsuzuki |
su.sok |
chéngxù / shǒuxǜ |
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