U+B8E8, 루
HANGUL SYLLABLE RU
Composition: +

[U+B8E7]
Hangul Syllables
[U+B8E9]




료 ←→ 뤄

Korean edit

Pronunciation edit

Romanizations
Revised Romanization?ru
Revised Romanization (translit.)?lu
McCune–Reischauer?ru
Yale Romanization?lwu

Etymology 1 edit

 
Korean Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia ko

Sino-Korean word from

Noun edit

(ru) (hanja )

  1. rampart, military wall
  2. baseball base
Derived terms edit

Etymology 2 edit

Korean reading of various Chinese characters.

Syllable edit

(ru)

  1. :
    (MC reading: (MC ljuH))
  2. :
    (MC reading: (MC luw))
  3. :
    (MC reading: (MC ljweX|ljweH))
  4. :
    (MC reading: (MC lwijH))
  5. :
    (MC reading: (MC luwH))
  6. :
    (MC reading: (MC lwijX))
  7. :
    (MC reading: (MC lju|luw))
  8. :
    (MC reading: (MC lju|luwH))
  9. :
    (MC reading: (MC ljuX))
  10. :
    (MC reading: (MC lju|luw|ljuX))
  11. :
    (MC reading: (MC luw|ljuX))
  12. :
    (MC reading: (MC lju|luwH))
  13. :
    (MC reading: (MC luwH))
  14. :
    (MC reading: (MC lju|luw|ljuX))
  15. :
    (MC reading: (MC ljuX|luwX))
  16. :
    (MC reading: (MC luw))
  17. :
    (MC reading: )
  18. :
    (MC reading: (MC luw|ljuX|luwH))
  19. :
    (MC reading: (MC luw|luwX))
  20. :
    (MC reading: (MC luw))
  21. :
    (MC reading: (MC luw))
Usage notes edit

In South Korea, the hanja above are read as (no) when used as a single word or as the first syllable of a Sino-Korean compound. However, the reading (ru) is retained when the hanja is not part of the first syllable of a Sino-Korean compound. This is known as 두음 법칙 (頭音法則, dueum beopchik).

Alternative forms edit
  • (no) (South Korea)

References edit