Korean edit

Etymology 1 edit

Related to 무슨 (museun).

Pronunciation edit

Romanizations
Revised Romanization?musin
Revised Romanization (translit.)?musin
McCune–Reischauer?musin
Yale Romanization?musin

Determiner edit

무신 (musin)

  1. Dialectal, Jeolla dialect, Gyeongsang, Chungcheong, Gangwon, and Seoul form of 무슨 (museun, what, kind of).
    • 1979 December 2, 오기생 [ogisaeng], “가난한 사람이 캔 산삼 [gananhan sarami kaen sansam]”, in 한국구비문학대계 [han'gukgubimunhakdaegye]‎[1], 경상북도 경주시 황오동 [gyeongsangbukdo gyeongjusi hwang'odong]:
      그덩, " 무신 ?"
      Ika-geudeong, geu musin il-go?"
      So he said this, 'what kind of work is it?'
    • 1982 May 12, 최삼룡 [choesamnyong], “성낭낭 고사 [seongnangnang gosa]”, in 한국구비문학대계 [han'gukgubimunhakdaegye]‎[2], 인천광역시 남구 [incheon'gwang'yeoksi namgu]:
      솔나무, 무신 단풍나무, 그런 활엽수...
      Sollamu, musin danpungnamu, geureon hwaryeopsu-ga...
      Pine trees, a kind of maple tree, those type of broad leafed trees...

Etymology 2 edit

Sino-Korean word from 武臣.

Pronunciation edit

Romanizations
Revised Romanization?Musin
Revised Romanization (translit.)?Musin
McCune–Reischauer?Musin
Yale Romanization?musin

Proper noun edit

무신 (Musin) (hanja 武臣)

  1. (historical) government official serving a military and war

Etymology 3 edit

Sino-Korean word from 戊申.

Pronunciation edit

Romanizations
Revised Romanization?Musin
Revised Romanization (translit.)?Musin
McCune–Reischauer?Musin
Yale Romanization?musin

Proper noun edit

무신 (Musin) (hanja 戊申)

  1. The forty-fifth term of the Chinese sexagenary cycle, sometimes glossed as "Earth Monkey" from its associated terms in the Chinese elements and zodiac.
Coordinate terms edit