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즈ᇫ

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Middle Korean

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Etymology

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From Old Korean (*CUS), attested together with a nominative case marker as 皃史 (*CUs-i) in Ujeok-ga and Mojukjirang-ga and also in Idu texts. The nature of Old Korean orthography, where only the final coda consonant of a noun is written phonetically, means that the only thing that can said about the Old Korean form is that its coda consonant was *-s.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /t͡sɨ̌z/, [t͡sɨ̌s̚]

Noun

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즈ᇫ〯 (cǔz) (isolated 즛〯 (cǔs), locative 즈〯ᅀᅦ〮 (cǔz-éy))

  1. visage; appearance; shape (e.g. of a person)
    • 1459, Worin seokbo 月印釋譜 / 월인석보, page 7:22b:
      다ᄉᆞᆺ〮 ()(차ᇙ〮)(녕〯)ㅣ 골 업〯슨 즈ᇫ〯을〮 지ᅀᅡ〮
      tàsós LÀ.CHÁLQ.NYĚ-y kwòl ěps-ùn cǔz-úl cìz-á
      The five female demons formed a hideous appearance
  2. (by extension) situation; circumstances; behavior

Descendants

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  • Korean: (jit, act; movement; behavior)