bialun wrote:as to this word - it was explained in one of the podcasts, where duyeon is going to get a job in a 서점... as a flshback: it went from germany to japan and then to korea and can now be shortende to alba...
i wonder if there are any other words that have come the same way...
Actually, in Hanbando the movie I think I heard the word MAMA when adressing the empress (여왕 이). I wonder, if it means something like "your highness" for a female ruler?
bialun wrote:각하 made me laugh cause in russian it is a word for kids meaning 똥))))
shanshanchua wrote:Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but I think both Korean and Japanese have their roots in the Chinese language. So that's why many words in these 3 languages sound similar. In fact, Korean used to be written entirely using Chinese characters (Hanja) although they were pronounced differently. It was only later that the Korean characters as we know them today were used.
Enkiae wrote:Here's one that always boggled me
the days of the week in China, Japan, India, Korea, and Europe have the same planets for the days!
It's less obvious in English...but think about French and Korean days of the week.
(my keyboard isn't working very well right now so I can't write in hangeul, sorry!)
Monday- Lundi- Weolyoil (Lundi- lune....even in English Monday= Moon day)
Tuesday- Mardi (mars)- hwayoil (hwa= fire, or fire planet aka mars)
Wednesday- Mercredi (Mercury) - suyoil (su- water, or waterplanet, mercury)
Thursday- Jeudi (Jeuve, Jupiter)- mokyoil (wood planet, jupiter)
Friday- Vendredi (Venus)- geumyoil (the metal/gold planet is...you guessed it, Venus )
Saturday (this one works in English too *Satur*n day)- Samedi - Doyoil
Sunday (*Sun*day)- Ilyoil.
austinfd wrote:That was an interesting movie. I learned the word 각하! (translated as Mr. President) And my dictionary calls it "Your Excellency"
SiEd wrote:Enkiae wrote:Here's one that always boggled me
the days of the week in China, Japan, India, Korea, and Europe have the same planets for the days!
It's less obvious in English...but think about French and Korean days of the week.
(my keyboard isn't working very well right now so I can't write in hangeul, sorry!)
Monday- Lundi- Weolyoil (Lundi- lune....even in English Monday= Moon day)
Tuesday- Mardi (mars)- hwayoil (hwa= fire, or fire planet aka mars)
Wednesday- Mercredi (Mercury) - suyoil (su- water, or waterplanet, mercury)
Thursday- Jeudi (Jeuve, Jupiter)- mokyoil (wood planet, jupiter)
Friday- Vendredi (Venus)- geumyoil (the metal/gold planet is...you guessed it, Venus )
Saturday (this one works in English too *Satur*n day)- Samedi - Doyoil
Sunday (*Sun*day)- Ilyoil.
English days are a bit more difficult in terms of teasing out their respective planetary bodies, but they're still there:
Tuesday - Tyr's Day - Tyr was the Norse god of war, cf. Mars
Wednesday - Odin's Day - Odin, Norse god of wisdom and prophecy, also a shapshifter, cf. Mercury
Thursday - Thor's Day - Thor, the Norse god of thunder, cf. Jupiter (wielder of thunderbolts)
Friday - Freya's Day - Freya, the Norse goddess of beauty, love, cf. Venus
Yes, that also occurs in Sanskrit and languages that borrowed the Sanskrit terms, such as Balinese:
Monday - Balinese: Soma (moon)
Tuesday - Balinese: Anggara (Mars)
Wednesday - Balinese: Buda (Mercury)
Thursday - Balinese: Wrespati (Jupiter)
Friday - Balinese: Sukra (Venus)
Saturday - Balinese: Saniscara (Saturn)
Sunday - Balinese: Redite (sun)
It's not surprising in itself that these heavenly bodies should be found cross-linguistically as day markers - these are the most visible to the naked eye. What is surprising, though, is the fact that they reflect the same order across languages.
Keith wrote:
I think this may be because the concept of 7 days in a week were created by...... the Greeks? or Romans? (not sure).... So the days of the week would have came from that. In Korean, Chinese, Balinese, etc
austinfd wrote:bialun wrote:각하 made me laugh cause in russian it is a word for kids meaning 똥))))
Yeah, I think that's common in a lot of languages, actually...
SiEd wrote:Keith wrote:
I think this may be because the concept of 7 days in a week were created by...... the Greeks? or Romans? (not sure).... So the days of the week would have came from that. In Korean, Chinese, Balinese, etc
Upon further investigation, the origins go even earlier - the Babylonians, who got them from the Sumerians.