Korean edit

Etymology edit

Of native Korean origin. From (heuk, earth, soil) +‎ (bap, rice (as food)). "Shovelful" from an imagery of a shovel as a spoon scooping rice; "death" probably from the imagery of the corpse becoming "food" for the earth.

Pronunciation edit

Romanizations
Revised Romanization?heukbap
Revised Romanization (translit.)?heulgbab
McCune–Reischauer?hŭkpap
Yale Romanization?hulkpap

Noun edit

흙밥 (heukbap)

  1. shovelful of soil; spadeful of soil; plow-ful of soil
  2. (Yukjin, euphemistic) corpse; food for worms
    • 2019, 곽충구 [gwakchunggu, Kwak Chung-gu], 두만강 유역의 조선어 방언 사전 [duman'gang yuyeogui joseoneo bang'eon sajeon, Dictionary of Korean Dialects of the Tumen River Area], volume II, Taehaksa, →ISBN, page 3702:
      버어대니 어저 흙밥 오랍구마. (Yukjin)
      I ttar-i ga beo'eo-daeni-mu eojeo-neu ye heukbab-i daen di orapguma.
      If this daughter of mine didn't go out and make money, I would have ended up as food for worms long ago.

Further reading edit

  • 곽충구 [Kwak Chung-gu] (2019) 두만강 유역의 조선어 방언 사전 [duman'gang yuyeogui joseoneo bang'eon sajeon, Dictionary of Korean Dialects of the Tumen River Area], volume II, Taehaksa, →ISBN, page 3702