Do Korean words come from Japanese, and in Chinese there are those words that come from Japanese

Updated on culture 2024-05-08
9 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    One,**"The relationship between the languages of the two countries should first of all"Grammarly"Compare, and don't start with "words".

    The reason for this is that language begins with "vocalization" and "speaking", not "writing". When you say it, grammar is naturally formed. And "writing" only appeared when civilization developed to a new stage.

    Second, the original grammatical formation of "Japanese" should have been influenced by "Korean".

    The reasons are:

    The earliest ethnic group in Japan was the Ainu people, and the grammar of the Ainu people was completely different from the grammar of modern Japanese.

    The grammar of modern Japanese is very similar to that of Korean.

    In addition, although "kanji" was introduced to Japan during the Sui and Tang dynasties, Japanese was widely expressed in kanji.

    However, the formation of Japanese grammar predates the formation of writing much earlier.

    Therefore, although Japanese uses a lot of kanji, it is still grammatically very different from Chinese.

    Japanese, Korean, Manchu, Mongolian, Uyghur, are all grammatically similar.

    Geographically, the closest to Japan should be South Korea.

    Third, however, the modern "Korean language" has been greatly influenced by the "Japanese language".

    The reasons are:

    After the Meiji Restoration, Japan's political, economic, and military all-round development was very rapid.

    Many Koreans study in Japan and bring back Japanese culture (including Japanese) with them when they return to Japan.

    Of course, there were also reasons for Japan's colonial rule of Korea.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    Most of the Korean words are based on Old Chinese words, and some are foreignwords mainly from English.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    A lot of anime and idioms come from Japanese, such as support, physiognomy, aesthetics, tatami mats, etc.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Both Korean and Japanese are Altaic languages, which are different from Chinese.

    However, because our motherland has been a world power for thousands of miles, through the spread of culture, Chinese characters have been introduced to these two former remote countries. They didn't have a written word of their own, so Chinese characters settled down. And some words in Chinese, the pronunciation is also introduced, rooted, changed, and known today.

    Originally, there were Chinese characters in Japanese and Korean, but due to the "de-sinicization" of South Korea, Chinese characters were abolished through policies. This is not the case in Japan, so it is still used today.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    I define this as the borrowing of Chinese from Japan and Korea. Some words were transmitted directly from China to Japan via North Korea (Korea). In Korean, this is called Chinese characters, which make up about 70% of their language, that is, those have corresponding Chinese words to correspond to.

    In Japanese, this is called "Han" or "Kanji", and the traditional Chinese character "Han" is also from China.

    The pronunciation is based on the mainstream languages of different periods of China. But with the addition of the pronunciation characteristics of the people. It's like "Chinese English" and "American English".

    These are limited to vocabulary and idioms from China. There are also Japanese and Korean people who make their own according to the characteristics of Chinese characters. For example, "communist" and "humorous" [these words were coined by Japan and sold back to China.]

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    No, there is still a big difference between Japanese and Chinese. However, the pronunciation of Korean is a bit similar.

    Both Japanese and Korean are sticky languages, while Chinese is different.

    However, in ancient times, our kanji was added to Japanese, but the pronunciation was differentKorean also used our kanji and the pronunciation was similar, but in recent years, Korean Chinese has been reducing the use of kanji.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    There are a certain number of Chinese words in Korean, and most of them are pronounced the same as Chinese, but they are written in Korean

    Japanese is the same, but the Japanese language is written as kanji

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    The origins of both Japanese and Korean are derived from Chinese, so it is normal that some things are the same.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Korean and Japanese have the same word order, with verbs at the end, and many words are from Chinese with similar pronunciations.

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