서울
Jeju
editAlternative forms
edit- (Seogwipo) 서월 (seowol)
Etymology
editCognate with Korean 서울 (Seoul), from Sillan 徐羅伐 (서라벌 (Seorabeol)).
Pronunciation
editNoun
edit서울 (seoul)
Proper noun
edit서울 (seoul)
- Seoul (the capital city of South Korea)
References
edit- “서울” in Jeju's culture and language, Digital museum.
Korean
editEtymology
editFirst attested in the generic "capital" sense in the Samguk yusa (三國遺事 / 삼국유사), 1281:
- 國號徐羅伐又徐伐,今俗訓「京」字云徐伐,以此故也。 [Korean Literary Sinitic, trad.]
- 국호서라벌우서벌이니 금속훈경자운서벌은 이차고야라 [Sino-Korean]
- The name of the [capital of the] kingdom [of Silla, the ancient kingdom which unified the Korean peninsula in the late 600s] was Syelapel or Syepel. This is why, [even] today, the Korean word for the character 京 (gyeong, “capital city”) is syepel.
The modern sense of "Seoul" is simply because Seoul was the capital of Korea from 1394 onwards.
In the hangul script, first attested in the Yongbi eocheon'ga (龍飛御天歌 / 용비어천가), 1447, as Middle Korean 셔〯ᄫᅳᆯ (Yale: syěWùl).
Also attested in the Bullyu dugongbu si eonhae (分類杜工部詩諺解 / 분류두공부시언해), 1481, as Middle Korean 셔〯욿 (Yale: syěwùlh).
As mentioned in the Samguk yusa, the sense of "capital" is most likely a generalization of the Old Korean place name referring specifically to the capital of Silla, the ancient state which unified Korea. This place name was transcribed using various Chinese characters, most often 徐羅伐 (Middle Korean Syelapel, modern Seorabeol). This appears to be a compound of:
- the Old Korean proper noun corresponding to Silla, approximated as Syela-. Note that Middle Korean rising pitch, as in syě, is created by a contraction of two syllables, which fits this theory.
- an Old Korean word meaning "town", approximated as -pel (compare Proto-Indo-European *tpelH- (“city, fortification”)), which can be seen in many other ancient toponyms. Note that Middle Korean -W- comes from former *-p-. Also compare Middle Korean *고ᄫᆞᆶ (Yale: *kwòWòlh, “town, district”) and 스〮ᄀᆞᄫᆞᆯ (Yale: súkòWòl, “rural town”), where this word has survived in fossilized form.
Hence the word may originally have meant "the town of the Silla".
Pronunciation
edit- (SK Standard/Seoul) IPA(key): [sʰʌ̹uɭ]
Audio: (file)
- Phonetic hangul: [서울]
Romanizations | |
---|---|
Revised Romanization? | Seoul |
Revised Romanization (translit.)? | Seoul |
McCune–Reischauer? | Sŏul |
Yale Romanization? | sewul |
Noun
edit서울 • (seoul)
See also
editProper noun
edit서울 • (Seoul)
- Seoul (the capital city of South Korea)
-
Audio (South Korea): (file)
-
Usage notes
edit- Unlike the majority of Korean place names, 서울 (Seoul) does not have a hanja form, so is only written in hangul.
Descendants
edit- → Burmese: ဆောအူလ် (hcau:ul)
- → Chinese: 首爾/首尔 (Shǒu'ěr)
- → English: Seoul (possibly through a French-based romanization)
- → French: Séoul
- → English: Seoul (possible)
- → Japanese: ソウル
- → Norwegian Bokmål: Seoul
- → Spanish: Seúl
See also
edit- Jeju terms with IPA pronunciation
- Jeju lemmas
- Jeju nouns
- Jeju proper nouns
- jje:Seoul
- jje:Cities in South Korea
- jje:National capitals
- jje:Places in South Korea
- Korean terms inherited from Middle Korean
- Korean terms derived from Middle Korean
- Native Korean words
- Korean terms inherited from Old Korean
- Korean terms derived from Old Korean
- Korean terms with audio pronunciation
- Korean terms with IPA pronunciation
- Korean lemmas
- Korean nouns
- Korean dated terms
- Korean terms with usage examples
- Korean proper nouns
- ko:Seoul
- ko:Cities in South Korea
- ko:National capitals
- ko:Places in South Korea