- Gyeongsang dialect
The Gyeongsang dialect is a dialect of the
Korean language which is widely used in theYeongnam region, which includes North andSouth Gyeongsang provinces. The Gyeongsang Dialect is considered the direct descendant of theSilla language by Korean linguists. A highly pronounced intonation distinguishes the Gyeongsang dialect from the standard language. Approximately 10 million Koreans use the Gyeongsang dialect.The Gyeongsang dialect also differs from area to area within the
Yeongnam region. A native speaker can distinguish the dialect ofDaegu from that ofBusan . Dialectal forms are relatively similar along the midstream ofNakdong River but are different near Pusan,Jinju , andPohang as well as along the eastern slopes ofMount Jiri .Vowels
The Gyeongsang Dialect lacks some of the vowels that are present in the standard dialect. For example, it lacks the vowels ㅟ(y) and ㅚ(oe). Thus, in the Gyeongsang Dialect, soegogi (쇠고기), meaning beef is pronounced sogogi. Furthermore, there is very little difference between the vowels ㅐ(ae) and ㅔ (e). In some areas of the
Yeongnam region, there is very little difference between the vowels ㅡ(eu) and ㅓ(eo). This limits the vowels of dialect down to: a(ㅏ), e(ㅔ), eo(ㅓ), o(ㅗ), u(ㅜ), and i(ㅣ). The speakers of this dialect also have a tendency to leave out medial yoderised vowels and medial-diphthongs. For example, Gwaja (과자), meaning sweets, is pronounced Gaja. Unlike the Seoul Dialect, vowel length remains adistinctive feature .Fact|date=February 2007The speakers of the Gyeongsang Dialect loosely follow
vowel harmony . For instance, oneul (오늘), meaning "today," is pronounced onal in the dialect. The main difference between the standard dialect vowel harmony and the Gyeongsang Dialect vowel harmony is that e is considered a "central" or "middle" vowel in the latter.Fact|date=February 2007Consonants
The Gyeongsang Dialect lacks some of the tensed consonants, most notably the ss (ㅆ) consonant. Thus, the speakers of the dialect pronounce ssal (쌀), meaning rice, sal (살). Recently, this phenomenon is losing its power, especially influenced by Seoul dialect .
Grammar
The Gyeongsang dialect maintains a trace of Middle Korean: the grammar of the dialect distinguishes between a yes-no question and a wh-question, while Standard Modern Korean does not. With an informal speech level, for example, yes-no questions end with "-a (아)" and wh-questions end with "-o (오)" in the Gyeongsang dialect, whereas in standard speech both types of questions end in either "-i (이)" or "-eo (어)" without a difference between the types of questions. For example:
* 밥 묵읏나? (Bap mugeutn"a"?) as opposed to 밥 먹었니? (Bap meogeotni?) or 밥 먹었어? (Bap meogeosseo?) — Did you eat?
* 머 하노? (Meo han"o"?) as opposed to 뭐 하니? (Mwo hani?) or 뭐 해? (Mwo hae?) — What are you doing?Notice that the first question can be answered with a yes or no, while the latter question is to be answered otherwise.
This phenomenon can also be observed in tag questions, which are answered with a yes or no.
*Eopje, geujy"a"? (업제 그쟈?) as opposed to Eopji, geureotchi? (없지, 그렇지?) — "It isn't there, is it?"Recent history
From the
Park Chung-hee to theKim Young-sam governments (1961 -1997 ), the Gyeongsang dialect had an informal supremacy over other dialects as all of the presidents were natives of Gyeongsang province.ee also
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List of Korea-related topics
*Dialectology External links
* [http://yu.ac.kr/~koredu/dapsa/etc.htm The characteristics of the North Gyeongsang Dialect] (sa Koreano)
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