스승
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Korean
[edit]Etymology
[edit]In the hangul script, first attested in the Seokbo sangjeol (釋譜詳節 / 석보상절), 1447, as Middle Korean 스스ᇰ (Yale: sùsùng).
Beyond the Hangul sources, apparently from a first-century Korean royal title which was transcribed in Middle Chinese as 次次雄 (MC tshijH tshijH hjuwng), which is explicitly said to have meant "shaman" in Old Korean.
Pronunciation
[edit]- (SK Standard/Seoul) IPA(key): [sʰɯsʰɯŋ]
- Phonetic hangul: [스승]
Romanizations | |
---|---|
Revised Romanization? | seuseung |
Revised Romanization (translit.)? | seuseung |
McCune–Reischauer? | sŭsŭng |
Yale Romanization? | susung |
- South Gyeongsang (Busan) pitch accent: 스승의 / 스승에 / 스승까지
Syllables in red take high pitch. This word always takes high pitch only on the second syllable, except before consonant-initial multisyllabic suffixes, when it takes full low pitch.
Noun
[edit]스승 • (seuseung)
- mentor, instructor, guide (in life)
- (North Pyongan, Hamgyong, Russia) shaman
- Synonyms: 무속인(巫俗人) (musogin), 무당 (mudang); see also Thesaurus:무속인
See also
[edit]- 선생(先生) (seonsaeng, “teacher”)
Categories:
- Korean terms inherited from Middle Korean
- Korean terms derived from Middle Korean
- Native Korean words
- Korean terms inherited from Old Korean
- Korean terms derived from Old Korean
- Korean terms with IPA pronunciation
- Korean terms with dialectal pitch accent marked
- Korean lemmas
- Korean nouns
- Korean terms with usage examples
- Pyongan Korean
- Hamgyong Korean
- Koryo-mar