Korean Phonology: Aspiration

From UniLang Wiki

Aspiration (격μ?Œ) is the burst of air which accompanies the Korean consonants γ…Š, γ…‹, γ…Œ, γ…?, and γ…Ž. Their unaspirated equivalents are γ…ˆ, γ„±, γ„·, and γ…‚ respectively, with γ…Ž having no equivalent. An example of aspirated vs. unaspirated are the English words stop and top, where the 't' in top is aspirated.

Examples:

  • 보병 (infantry), ν?¬λ³‘ (artillery)
  • 발 (foot), νŒ” (arm)
  • μ „ (before), 천 (thousand)

If γ…Ž comes at the end of a syllable and the initial consonant of the following syllable can be aspirated, it will be pronounced as such.

Examples:

  • μ•Šλ‹€ (negative verb) -> /μ•ˆνƒ€/
  • λ„£λ‹€ (to put) -> /λ„ˆνƒ€/
  • μ’‹κΈ° λ•Œλ¬Έ... (because it's good...) -> /μ‘°ν‚€ λ•Œλ¬Έ/

>> Languages >> Korean >> Korean Phonology

Personal tools