살근살근

Korean

Etymology

Of native Korean origin.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [sʰa̠ɭɡɯnsʰa̠ɭɡɯn]
  • Phonetic hangeul: []
Revised Romanization? salgeunsalgeun
Revised Romanization (translit.)? salgeunsalgeun
McCune–Reischauer? salgŭnsalgŭn
Yale Romanization? salkunsalkun

Ideophone

살근살근 (salgeunsalgeun)

  1. while rubbing very softly and lightly
  2. (of an action) effortlessly and subtly
Sound-symbolic terms derived from 살/슬 (sal/seul-, "lightly, subtly")
Yang-vowel form
Yin-vowel form
살살 (salsal)슬슬 (seulseul)
살근살근 (salgeunsalgeun)슬근슬근 (seulgeunseulgeun)
살금살금 (salgeumsalgeum)슬금슬금 (seulgeumseulgeum)
살며시 (salmyeosi)
살몃살몃 (salmyeotsalmyeot)
슬며시 (seulmyeosi)
슬몃슬몃 (seulmyeotseulmyeot)
살포시 (salposi)살푸시 (salpusi)
살짝 (saljjak)
살짝살짝 (saljjaksaljjak)
슬쩍 (seuljjeok)
슬쩍슬쩍 (seuljjeokseuljjeok)
사르르 (sareureu)스르르 (seureureu)

Usage notes

살근살근 (salgeunsalgeun) is the yang vowel, or bright vowel, form of 슬근슬근 (seulgeunseulgeun).

In contemporary Korean, the yang vowels refer to /a/, /ɛ/, and /o/. In Korean ideophones and sensory words, forms with these vowels have a connotation of brightness, smallness, clearness, sharpness, youth, or positiveness.

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