해라체

Korean

Etymology

From 해라 (haera), formal, non-polite imperative of 하다 (hada, “to do”) + (che, “style”)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key)[he̞ɾa̠t͡ɕʰe̞]
  • Phonetic Hangul[]
Revised Romanization? haerache
Revised Romanization (translit.)? haelache
McCune–Reischauer? haerach'e
Yale Romanization? haylachey

Noun

해라체 (haerache)

  1. The formal, non-polite speech level in Korean.

Usage notes

해라체 (haerache) is a speech level used to younger or lower-rank people. It is also used almost universally in books, newspapers, and magazines; also used in reported speech ("She said that...").

Korean words inflected in this speech level are characterized by the ending ㄴ다 present tense, ㅆ다 in the past tense, and in the imperative. E.g.:

  • 한다 (handa): "does"
  • 했다 (haetda): "did"
  • 해라 (haera): "do" (command)

See also

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.