사랑
Korean
editPronunciation
edit- (SK Standard/Seoul) IPA(key): [sʰa̠ɾa̠ŋ]
Audio: (file)
- Phonetic hangul: [사랑]
Romanizations | |
---|---|
Revised Romanization? | sarang |
Revised Romanization (translit.)? | salang |
McCune–Reischauer? | sarang |
Yale Romanization? | salang |
Etymology 1
editFirst attested in the Worin seokbo (月印釋譜 / 월인석보), 1459, as Middle Korean ᄉᆞ라ᇰ (Yale: sòlàng).
Probably a nativisation of the Sino-Korean term 사량 (思量, saryang, “deep thoughts, consideration; longing”).[1][2] In the fifteenth century, the word more commonly meant "thought; reflection," identical to the Chinese semantics, in addition to "love".
Displaced native 괴〯다〮 (Yale: kwǒy-tá, “to love”) and ᄃᆞᆺ〯다〮 (Yale: tǒs-tá, “to love”).
Noun
edit사랑 • (sarang) (usually no hanja; sometimes 思郞)
Alternative forms
editDerived terms
editRelated terms
edit- (Yukjin dialect) 사랍다 (sarapda)
Etymology 2
editSino-Korean word from 舍廊, from 舍 (“house, dwelling”) + 廊 (“corridor, porch, veranda”).
Noun
edit- (historical) salon, hall (in a traditional Korean house)