Korean

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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(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

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

Interjection

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아니야 (eung aniya)

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