U+BEA8, 뺨
HANGUL SYLLABLE BBYAM
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[U+BEA7]
Hangul Syllables
[U+BEA9]

Korean

Etymology

First attested in the Gugeopganibang eonhae (救急簡易方諺解 / 구급간이방언해), 1489, as Middle Korean ᄲᅡᆷ (spam). Also attested in the Bak Tongsa eonhae (朴通事諺解 / 박통사언해), 1677 as ᄲᅣᆷ (spyam), direct origin of the standard form. Compare dialectal forms (byam, Central/Gangwon), (ppam, Hengyeong/Jeolla/Gyeongnam), (ppaem, Gyeongbuk/Chungbuk), etc. and Jeju 삐얌 (ppiyam).[1]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key)[p͈ja̠m]
  • Phonetic Hangul[]
Revised Romanization? ppyam
Revised Romanization (translit.)? ppyam
McCune–Reischauer? ppyam
Yale Romanization? ppyam

Noun

(ppyam)

  1. cheek
  2. width (as of slim things)

Synonyms

Derived terms

  • 뺨따귀 (ppyamttagwi, “(humble) cheek”)

References

  1. Rei Fukui (2017-03-28) 小倉進平『朝鮮語方言の研究』所載資料による言語地図とその解釈―第1集, 東京大学人文社会系研究科 韓国朝鮮文化研究室, page 25-28
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