대통령
Appearance
Korean
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Sino-Korean word from 大統領 (“president”), an orthographic borrowing from Japanese 大統領 (daitōryō).[1]
Pronunciation
[edit]- (SK Standard/Seoul) IPA(key): [ˈtɛ(ː)tʰo̞ŋɲʌ̹ŋ] ~ [ˈte̞(ː)tʰo̞ŋɲʌ̹ŋ]
Audio: (file)
- Phonetic hangul: [대(ː)통녕/데(ː)통녕]
- Though still prescribed in Standard Korean, most speakers in both Koreas no longer distinguish vowel length.
Romanizations | |
---|---|
Revised Romanization? | daetongnyeong |
Revised Romanization (translit.)? | daetonglyeong |
McCune–Reischauer? | taet'ongnyŏng |
Yale Romanization? | tāy.thonglyeng |
- South Gyeongsang (Busan) pitch accent: 대통령의 / 대통령에 / 대통령까지
Syllables in red take high pitch. This word always takes high pitch on the second and third syllables, and lowers the pitch of subsequent suffixes.
Noun
[edit]대통령 • (daetongnyeong) (hanja 大統領)
- president of a country
Derived terms
[edit]- 대통령령(大統領令) (daetongnyeongnyeong, “presidential decree”)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]Categories:
- Sino-Korean words
- Korean terms borrowed from Japanese
- Korean orthographic borrowings from Japanese
- Korean terms derived from Japanese
- Korean terms with long vowels in the first syllable
- Korean terms with audio pronunciation
- Korean terms with IPA pronunciation
- Korean terms with dialectal pitch accent marked
- Korean lemmas
- Korean nouns
- Korean terms with usage examples
- ko:People
- ko:Government
- ko:Heads of state
- ko:Leaders