U+C7AC, 재
HANGUL SYLLABLE JAE
Composition: +
Dubeolsik input:w-o

[U+C7AB]
Hangul Syllables
[U+C7AD]

Korean

Etymology 1





자 ←→ 쟈

Syllable

(jae)

  1. A Hangul syllabic block made up of and .

Etymology 2

First attested in the Worin seokbo (月印釋譜 / 월인석보), 1459, as Middle Korean ᄌᆡ (coy).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key)[t͡ɕe̞]
  • Phonetic Hangul[]
Revised Romanization? jae
Revised Romanization (translit.)? jae
McCune–Reischauer? chae
Yale Romanization? cay

Noun

(jae)

  1. ash

Etymology 3

First attested in the Yongbi eocheonga (龍飛御天歌 / 용비어천가), 1447, as Middle Korean (cay). Considered to be from the same root with (jat, “castle, fortresss”), because both of them use the same hanja for the hun readings in the pre-modern times.[1]

Noun

(jae)

  1. mountain pass. compare 고개.

Etymology 4

Korean reading of various Chinese characters.

Prefix

재— (jae-) (hanja )

  1. again

Syllable

(jae)

References

  1. MIZUNO, Shumpei (february 2013), “外邦図(朝鮮·略図)地名における古代朝鮮語語彙 : 「忽(kol)」「己(ki)」「잣(cas)」について”, in 北海商科大学論集(ISSN 2186-330X)第2巻 第1号 (PDF)
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