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The Revised Romanization of Korean is the official Korean language romanization system in South Korea. The system was released by South Korean authorities in 2000 and is the South Korean official replacement for the 1984 McCune-Reischauer–based romanization system. The new system is similar to the system used before 1984, except that the old system did not faithfully represent consonants because their pronunciation changes (according to non-Korean sensibility) depending on position within a word. The Korean language (íêµì´ / ì¡°ì ì´) is the most widely used language in Korea, and is the official language of both North and South Korea. ...
There are three commonly used romanization schemes for the Korean Hangul script, namely: Revised Romanization of Korean: official in South Korea since 2000 and quite common on the Internet; McCune-Reischauer: formerly official in South Korea and a variation of which is currently official in North Korea, and common in...
McCune-Reischauer is one of the two most widely used Korean language romanization systems, along with the Revised Romanization of Korean, which replaced (a modified) McCune-Reischauer as the official romanization system in South Korea in 2000. ...
The Yale Romanizations are four systems created during World War II by the United States for its soldiers. ...
The Korean language (íêµì´ / ì¡°ì ì´) is the most widely used language in Korea, and is the official language of both North and South Korea. ...
In linguistics, romanization or latinization is a system for representing a word or language with the Roman (Latin) alphabet, where the original word or language used a different writing system. ...
This article is about the year 2000. ...
This page is about the year 1984. ...
McCune-Reischauer is one of the two most widely used Korean language romanization systems, along with the Revised Romanization of Korean, which replaced (a modified) McCune-Reischauer as the official romanization system in South Korea in 2000. ...
The Revised Romanization uses no non-alphabetic symbols (diacritics) except very limited, often optional, use of the hyphen. It was developed by the National Academy of the Korean Language starting in 1995 and was released to the public on July 4, 2000, by South Korea's Ministry of Culture and Tourism, which explained that the reason for the reduction of special characters was to eliminate difficulty of entering, or rather the ease of ignoring, diacritics on computers and — more importantly — rationalize Korean language with the plain ASCII text of internet domain names. An alphabet is a complete standardized set of letters â basic written symbols â each of which roughly represents a phoneme of a spoken language, either as it exists now or as it may have been in the past. ...
A diacritical mark or diacritic, sometimes called an accent mark, is a mark added to a letter to alter a words pronunciation or to distinguish between similar words. ...
A hyphen ( -, or â ) is a punctuation mark. ...
1995 (MCMXCV) was a common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
July 4 is the 185th day of the year (186th in leap years) in the Gregorian Calendar, with 180 days remaining. ...
This article is about the year 2000. ...
A diacritical mark or diacritic, sometimes called an accent mark, is a mark added to a letter to alter a words pronunciation or to distinguish between similar words. ...
A computer is a device or machine for processing information from data according to a program â a compiled list of instructions. ...
Features
Notable features of the Revised Romanization system are: - 어 and 으 are written as digraphs with two vowel letters: eo and eu, respectively.
- ㅝ is written as wo and ㅢ is written as ui.
- Aspirated consonants (ㅋ, ㅌ, ㅍ, ㅊ) have no apostrophe (k, t, p, and ch) like McCune-Reischauer. Their unaspirated counterparts (ㄱ, ㄷ, ㅂ, ㅈ) are written with letters that are voiced in English (g, d, b, and j). However, the unaspirated consonants are also written as k, t, and p when at the end of a word or when followed by a consonant, when they are pronounced as such in reality.
- ㅅ is always written as s, and never also as sh.
- ㄹ is r before a vowel, l before a consonant or at the end of a word. Double ㄹ is always ll.
In addition, there are Special Provisions for regular phonological rules that makes exceptions to transliteration (see Korean language#Phonology). Note: This page contains IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. ...
Listen to this article · (info) This audio file was created from the revision dated 2005-07-18, and does not reflect subsequent edits to the article. ...
An apostrophe An apostrophe (French, from the Greek αÏοÏÏÏοÏÎ¿Ï ÏÏοÏÏδια, the accent of elision) ( â ) is a punctuation and sometimes diacritic mark in languages written in the Latin alphabet. ...
Phoneticians define phonation as use of the laryngeal system to generate an audible source of acoustic energy, i. ...
The Korean language (íêµì´ / ì¡°ì ì´) is the most widely used language in Korea, and is the official language of both North and South Korea. ...
Other rules and recommendations include: - The optional hyphen is used to disambiguate syllables, e.g., jeong-eum (정음) versus jeon-geum (전금)
- Use of the hyphen is not necessary, but permitted, between syllables of given names
- Phonological exceptions do not apply to given names, transliterate them as they are written in Hangul
- Syllables of Korean administrative units (such as do) are separated from the placename with a hyphen
- However, names for geographic features and artificial structures are connected to the placename
- Capitalize proper nouns
A hyphen ( -, or â ) is a punctuation mark. ...
The Korean name Hong Gildong. ...
Hangul (hangul: íê¸; revised: hangeul; McCune-Reischauer: hangÅl) is the native alphabet used to write the Korean language, as opposed to the Hanja system borrowed from China. ...
(Note: This page is currently under construction. ...
In geography and cartography, a toponym is a place name, a geographical name, a proper name of locality, region, or some other part of Earths surface or its natural or artificial feature. ...
A noun, or noun substantive, is a word or phrase that refers to a person, place, thing, event, substance or quality. ...
Usage The Revised Romanization is not expected to be adopted as the official romanization of Korean family names. For example, the common family name, Lee (이), would be I (Yi in strict McCune-Reischauer) in this new system. Given names and commercial names are encouraged to change, but not necessary. All Korean textbooks were required to comply with the new system by February 28, 2002. English-language newspapers in South Korea initially resisted the new system, citing its flaws, though some later gave in to government pressure. The Korea Herald currently follows the revised system, while the Korea Times follows the McCune-Reischauer system, but without breves. The Korean name Hong Gildong. ...
This article is about the business concept; Commerce is also the name of several places in the United States. ...
February 28 is the 59th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar. ...
2002 (MMII) is a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
This article is about the breve breve in music, see double whole note. ...
North Korea continues to use a version of the McCune-Reischauer system of Romanization, which was in official use in South Korea from 1984 to 2002. Specialists in Korean studies, both in and out of South Korea, tend to use McCune-Reischauer, although a system developed at Yale University is often used by linguists.
Criticism Despite the South Korean government's intentions to rationalize the Romanization of Korean words and place names, the release of the revised system met with considerable opposition among international residents in Korea, many of whom felt the revised system was seriously flawed and felt disgruntled that the government failed to consult with them beforehand, since they are the primary users of Romanized Korean inside South Korea. The Ministry of Culture and Tourism responded that the primary purpose of the new system was not for the sake of foreigners and pointed out that foreign experts had been consulted, while admiting that the new system did in many cases fail to reflect correct pronunciation of Korean language. That task the 1984 M-R system had addressed well, but in so doing did not maintain a one-to-one correspondence between hangul consonants and the Western (Latin) alphabet. Among the pronunciation problems, however, many if not most were dealt with satisfactorily from the perspective of pronunciation, through compromises in proper names (strict application of the new system for academic usage has serious pronunciation issues from the perspective of foreigners, but that problem is moot). In proper names (the only really problematic area) only the initial consonants were usually affected -- and this because it is at the beginning of a term that searching for a domain name would typically go awry. The MoCT pointed out that China, too, underwent a similar upheaval with the international community decades previous when the Beijing government enforced its own standardization (Note: Beijing used to be spelled "Peking"). Hangul (hangul: íê¸; revised: hangeul; McCune-Reischauer: hangÅl) is the native alphabet used to write the Korean language, as opposed to the Hanja system borrowed from China. ...
Critics of the Revised Romanization System say that the one-to-one correpondence of Korean characters to Roman letters (e.g., usually representing ㄱ as g) that is the hallmark of the new system is overly simplistic and fails to represent sound changes that occur naturally when the position of a consonant changes (e.g., at the beginning of a word, ㄱ is pronounced halfway between an unaspirated k and a g, rather than as a straight g). Critics also complain that people unfamiliar with Hangul pronunciation may be confused by what "eo" and "eu" are intended to represent in the revised system. With common English words or names such as "geography", "Leonardo", and "neon" representing a two-syllable sound for eo, a neophyte to Korean words may fail to recognize that eo is supposed to represent a vowel sound like that of "son" or "fun". Indeed, a frequent complaint of many foreign residents and visitors to South Korea is that the revised Romanization system hinders their ability to even come close to an accurate and comprehensible rendering of Korean pronunciation.
External links - Official introductions
- Mirror site from Office of the President; change encoding to EUC-KR manually
- Simplified Table for a quick overview; change encoding to EUC-KR manually
- List of syllables and Romanization: Wikisource
- Comparison table of different romanization systems from UN Working Group on Romanization Systems (PDF file)
- Romanization of Korean by the National Academy of the Korean Language
Wikisource, The Free Library, is a Wikimedia project to build a free wiki library of primary source texts, along with translations of source-texts into any language and other supporting materials. ...
See also |