Korean Phonology: Aspiration
From UniLang Wiki
Aspiration (격μ?) is the burst of air which accompanies the Korean consonants γ , γ , γ , γ ?, and γ . Their unaspirated equivalents are γ , γ±, γ·, and γ respectively, with γ having no equivalent. An example of aspirated vs. unaspirated are the English words stop and top, where the 't' in top is aspirated.
Examples:
- λ³΄λ³ (infantry), ν?¬λ³ (artillery)
- λ° (foot), ν (arm)
- μ (before), μ² (thousand)
If γ 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:
- μλ€ (negative verb) -> /μν/
- λ£λ€ (to put) -> /λν/
- μ’κΈ° λλ¬Έ... (because it's good...) -> /μ‘°ν€ λλ¬Έ/
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