Korean edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

(eung, yeah) +‎ 아니야 (aniya, no). Not a calque of English yeah, no.

Unlike in English, Korean affirmative interjections such as (eung, “yeah”) follow the polarity of the question being replied to. An affirmative response to a negatively stated question means that the negative is true, e.g. 거기 더워? — , 더워. (geogi an deowo? - eung, an deowo., Isn't it hot there? — No, it's not hot., literally Isn't it hot there? — Yes, it's not hot.) Thus, unlike in the English equivalent, (eung, “yeah”) is being used in its usual affirmative sense (as a response to an implied negatively stated question) and not as an intensifier.

Pronunciation edit

Romanizations
Revised Romanization?eung aniya
Revised Romanization (translit.)?eung aniya
McCune–Reischauer?ŭng aniya
Yale Romanization?ung aniya

Interjection edit

아니야 (eung aniya)

  1. (slang) yeah, no (sarcastic negative reply)