Korean edit

Etymology edit

Sino-Korean word from 片紙. First attested in a Korean text in the Samgang haengsildo (三綱行實圖 / 삼강행실도), 1511, in hanja form and with the meaning of "small piece of paper".

In the Hangul script, first attested in the 順天金氏墓出土簡札 / 순천김씨 묘 출토 간찰 ("Letters excavated from the grave of Lady Suncheon Kim"), c. 1585, as Middle Korean 편지 (Yale: phyenci). This is also the first attestation of the "letter" sense.

The hanja form 便紙 is unetymological and first appears in Korean Classical Chinese sources in the eighteenth century.

Pronunciation edit

  • (SK Standard/Seoul) IPA(key): [ˈpʰjɘ(ː)ɲd͡ʑi]
  • Phonetic hangul: [(ː)]
    • Though still prescribed in Standard Korean, most speakers in both Koreas no longer distinguish vowel length.
Romanizations
Revised Romanization?pyeonji
Revised Romanization (translit.)?pyeonji
McCune–Reischauer?p'yŏnji
Yale Romanization?phyēn.ci

Noun edit

편지 (pyeonji) (hanja 便紙/片紙)

  1. letter (written message)
    부모님 편지 얼마나 자주 씁니까?
    Bumonim-kke pyeonji-reul eolmana jaju sseumnikka?
    How often do you write letters to your parents?

Middle Korean edit

Etymology edit

From Middle Chinese 片紙 (MC phenH tsyeX).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

편지 (phyenci) (hanja 片紙)

  1. small piece of paper
  2. letter

Descendants edit

  • Korean: 편지 (pyeonji)