속수무책
Korean
    
    Etymology
    
Sino-Korean word from 束手無策 (“to have one's hands bound and have no solution; to be at a loss”).
Pronunciation
    
- (SK Standard/Seoul) IPA(key): [sʰo̞ks͈umut͡ɕʰɛk̚] ~ [sʰo̞ks͈umut͡ɕʰe̞k̚]
- Phonetic hangul: [속쑤무책/속쑤무첵]
| Romanizations | |
|---|---|
| Revised Romanization? | soksumuchaek | 
| Revised Romanization (translit.)? | sogsumuchaeg | 
| McCune–Reischauer? | soksumuch'aek | 
| Yale Romanization? | sok.swumuchayk | 
Noun
    
속수무책 • (soksumuchaek) (hanja 束手無策)
- (set phrase from Classical Chinese) being at a loss what to do; feeling helpless in the face of some difficulty
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