Korean edit

Etymology edit

First attested in the Buksae giryak (北塞記略 / 북새기략), 1780, as Early Modern Korean 夜來 (Yale: yaloy).

From Manchu ᡟᠠᡵᡠ (yaru, Dolly Varden trout (Salvelinus malma)) or a cognate Jurchen form.

Pronunciation edit

Romanizations
Revised Romanization?yare
Revised Romanization (translit.)?yale
McCune–Reischauer?yare
Yale Romanization?yaley

Noun edit

야레 (yare)

  1. The Chinese lizard gudgeon, Leuciscus waleckii.

References edit

  • 박경래, 곽충구, 강영봉 (2010), “새로 발굴한 방언(5) [Newly discovered dialectal forms (10)]”, in Bang'eonhak, volume 11, pages 251—288
  • National Institute of the Korean Language (Naver.com mirror) (accessed 2007-01-19), “야레”, in 표준국어대사전[1]
  • 김익수; 박종영 (2002), “야레”, in 한국의 민물고기, Seoul: Kyo-Hak Publishing, →ISBN, page 157