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  2. Gyeongsang dialect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyeongsang_dialect

    Most Gyeongsang dialects have six vowels, a (ㅏ), e (ㅔ), i (ㅣ), eo (ㅓ), o (ㅗ), u (ㅜ). In most areas, the vowelsㅐ(ae) and ㅔ (e) are conflated. A 2015 study found that Gyeongsang dialect speakers merged these sounds more significantly than speakers from central regions of Korea, but less so than speakers from southwestern Korea in Jeonbuk or Jeonnam. [2]

  3. Korean dialects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_dialects

    The Gyeongsang dialect is one of the best-known South Korean dialects, known not only by Koreans but also by foreigners interested in Korean culture. The Gyeongsang dialect is frequently characterized as the most "rough" and "macho" dialect of all South Korean dialects. The Gyeongsang dialect is one of the most common dialects employed in K-dramas.

  4. Gyeongsang Province - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyeongsang_Province

    The language used in Gyeongsang province (south and north) is the Yeongnam dialect of Korean, also called the Gyeongsang dialect, and the intonation and vocabulary is different from the standard Seoul dialect (표준어, pyojuneo) in several ways. [1] Yeongnam dialect itself is further subdivided into several dialects.

  5. Eight Provinces of Korea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eight_Provinces_of_Korea

    During most of the Joseon dynasty, Korea was divided into eight provinces (do; 도; 道).The eight provinces' boundaries remained unchanged for about 480 years from 1413 to 1895, and formed a geographic paradigm that is still reflected today in the Korean Peninsula's administrative divisions, dialects, and regional distinctions.

  6. Chungcheong dialect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chungcheong_dialect

    However, Chungcheong dialect users are less proud of their local dialects than Jeolla and Gyeongsang dialects. According to the 2020 survey of the people's language awareness, 22.5% of Gyeongsang-do dialects and 10.3% of Jeolla dialects were found in the most commonly used languages, while only 7.1% of Chungcheong dialects were found. [4]

  7. Talk:Gyeonggi dialect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Gyeonggi_dialect

    I don't mean that there are "multi standards" in Seoul accent. I just wrote about "Seoul dialect" not "Seoul dialect as the standard language" -- so as "dialect" itself. The exact spoken form of the standard form of the South Korean language is the "general form" -- used by news anchors -- I mentioned in the article.

  8. Japanese dialects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_dialects

    The Western Japanese Kansai dialect was the prestige dialect when Kyoto was the capital, and Western forms are found in literary language as well as in honorific expressions of modern Tokyo dialect (and therefore Standard Japanese), such as adverbial ohayō gozaimasu (not *ohayaku), the humble existential verb oru, and the polite negative ...

  9. Provinces of Korea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/-do

    Haeyang-do(해양도) South Jeolla: Muju Seungju-mok Sangju-mok: Yeongnam-do Gyeongsang-do(경상도) North Gyeongsang: Sangju Jinju-mok Sannam-do: Western South Gyeongsang: Gangju Yeongdong-do: Eastern South Gyeongsang: Yangju — Sakbang-do Gyoju-do(교주도,交州道),also known as gyoju gangneungdo(交州江陵道,교주강릉도) [a ...