하릅

Korean

Etymology

First attested in the Sigyeong Eonhae (시경언해 / 詩經諺解), 1614, as Middle Korean ᄒᆞᄅᆞᆸ (Yale: halop).

Related to 하루 (haru, “one day”), probably ultimately from Old Korean 一等 (*HAton) via lenition of intervocalic */t/ to /ɾ/.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ha̠ɾɯp̚]
  • Phonetic hangeul: []
Revised Romanization? hareup
Revised Romanization (translit.)? haleub
McCune–Reischauer? harŭp
Yale Romanization? halup

Noun

하릅 (hareup)

  1. (archaic, usually compounded) an animal of one year of age

Derived terms

  • 하릅강아지 (hareup-gang'aji, “one-year-old puppy”)
  • 하릅망아지 (hareup-mang'aji, “one-year-old colt”)
  • 하릅비둘기 (hareup-bidulgi, “one-year-old pigeon”)
  • 하릅송아지 (hareup-song'aji, “one-year-old calf”)

Usage notes

In Contemporary Korean, the word is not used in isolation, and has been generally replaced (with a semantic shift from "one-year-old" to "young") by 하룻 (harut) in the compounded forms.

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