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  2. Chinese influence on Korean culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_influence_on...

    Chinese influence on Korean culture can be traced back as early as the Goguryeo period; these influences can be demonstrated in the Goguryeo tomb mural paintings. [1]: 14 Throughout its history, Korea has been greatly influenced by Chinese culture, borrowing the written language, arts, religions, philosophy and models of government administration from China, and, in the process, transforming ...

  3. Sino-Korean vocabulary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-Korean_vocabulary

    Sino-Korean vocabulary includes words borrowed directly from Chinese, as well as new Korean words created from Chinese characters, and words borrowed from Sino-Japanese vocabulary. Many of these terms were borrowed during the height of Chinese-language literature on Korean culture. Subsequently, many of these words have also been truncated or ...

  4. Sinosphere - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinosphere

    These are well-documented to have historically used Chinese characters, with Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese each having roughly 60% of their vocabulary derived from Chinese. [ 77 ] [ 78 ] [ 79 ] There is a small set of minor languages that are comparable to the core East Asian languages, such as Zhuang and Hmong-Mien .

  5. History of Sino-Korean relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Sino-Korean...

    According to Samguk yusa, Dangun Joseon was the first state that represented Korean cultural identity. [1] Although controversial, a legend tells that in around 1100 BC a Chinese sage named Jizi (Gija) and his intellectuals fled from the Shang dynasty to avoid political turmoil and sought asylum in Gojoseon, and active cultural trades ensued after.

  6. Korean language in China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_language_in_China

    The educational standard is the North Korean standard language. Chinese Korean vocabulary is very similar to the North Korean standard, as is orthography; a major exception of orthography is that the spelling of some Chinese cities is different (for example, Hong Kong is referred to by the Sino-Korean name of 香港, 향항, Hyanghang, rather ...

  7. Literary Chinese literature in Korea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literary_Chinese...

    The role of Literary Chinese was so dominant that the history of Korean literature and Chinese language are almost contiguous till the 20th Century. Korean works in Chinese are typically rendered in English according to modern Korean hangul pronunciations: Samguk Sagi (三國史記) "Three Kingdoms History"

  8. Hanja - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanja

    The Chinese language, however, was quite different from the Korean language, consisting of terse, often monosyllabic words with a strictly analytic, SVO structure in stark contrast to the generally polysyllabic, very synthetic, SOV structure, with various grammatical endings that encoded person, levels of politeness and case found in Korean.

  9. Korean Confucianism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_Confucianism

    One of the most substantial influences in Korean intellectual history was the introduction of Confucian thought as part of the cultural influence from China. Today the legacy of Confucianism remains a fundamental part of Korean society, shaping the moral system, the way of life, social relations between old and young, high culture, and is the ...