사ᄅᆞᆷ
Early Modern Korean
Etymology
From Middle Korean 사〯ᄅᆞᆷ (sǎlòm).
Pronunciation
- (c. 1750) IPA(key): [saː.ɾʌm~saː.ɾam]
Noun
사ᄅᆞᆷ (salom)
- person
- after 1795, 李洙 (I Su) [Lee Soo] et al., chapter 2, in 重刊老乞大諺解 (Junggan Nogeoldae Eonhae) [Reprinted Nogeoldae, with Korean Interpretation]Ogura Coll. Asami Coll., volume 1, page 3:
Descendants
- Korean: 사람 (saram)
Jeju
Etymology
See main entry.
Pronunciation
Romanizations | |
---|---|
Revised Romanization? | sarawm |
Revised Romanization (translit.)? | salawm |
Yale Romanization? | salom |
Noun
사ᄅᆞᆷ (sarawm)
- (rare) alternative form of 사름 (sareum, “human being, person”)
Middle Korean
Etymology
Inherited from Old Korean 人音 (*SALOm). By surface analysis, 살〯다〮 (sǎl-tá, “to live, to be alive”) + -ᄋᆞᆷ (-om, noun suffix).
Pronunciation
- (Morphophonemic) IPA(key): ⫽sǎlʌm⫽
Noun
사〯ᄅᆞᆷ (sǎlòm)
- person
- Synonym: 놈 (nwom)
- 1446, 訓民正音諺解 (Hunmin jeongeum eonhae):
- 사〯ᄅᆞᆷ마〯다〮 ᄒᆡ〯ᅇᅧ〮 수〯ᄫᅵ〮 니겨〮
- sǎlòm-mǎtá hǒyOOyé swǔWí nìkyé
- That every person would easily master it,