A number of Korean dialects (
Korean: 한국어의 방언) are spoken on the
Korean Peninsula. The peninsula is very mountainous and each dialect's "territory" corresponds closely to the natural boundaries between different geographical
regions of Korea. Most of the dialects are named for one of the traditional
Eight Provinces of Korea. Two are sufficiently distinct from the others to be considered separate languages, the
Jeju and the
Yukjin languages.
Dialect areas
Korea is a mountainous country, and this could be the main reason why Korean is divided into numerous small local dialects. There are few clear demarcations, so dialect classification is necessarily to some extent arbitrary.
A common classification, originally introduced by
Shinpei Ogura in 1944 and adjusted by later authors, identifies six dialect areas:[5][6]
The central dialect refers to a dialect generally used in the surrounding areas of
Hwanghae Province,
Gangwon Province (
Kangwon Province), and
Chungcheong Province, centering on
Seoul and
Gyeonggi Province. Depending on scholars, it is divided into the
Gyeonggi dialect (Central dialect) and
Chungcheong dialect from the beginning, or subdivided into Gyeonggi dialect, Gangwon dialect, Hwanghae dialect, and Chungcheong dialect. The central dialect region is very large, so it is not easy to extract features common to all regions. Among its characteristics, it is more difficult to extract the unique characteristics of the central dialect. For example, which dialect has an intonation as a phonological list is very important in the dialect compartment. Most of the central dialects do not have intonations, but they have intonations in
Yeongdong,
Gangwon Province, as well as
Pyeongchang,
Jeongseon, and
Yeongwol, the surrounding
Yeongseo regions. In the case of vocabulary, the difference is so severe that we do not know how many pieces the central dialect will be divided into. Therefore, the characteristics of the central dialect, which correspond to all regions of the central dialect region, are extremely rare, and if there is such a feature, it is easy to be found in other dialects rather than just the central dialect. Therefore, it may be close to the fact that it is the central dialect that combines the remaining dialects except for other dialects where distinct characteristics are observed, rather than having a specific phenomenon observed only in the central dialect. Since the central dialect consists of sub-dialects that are more heterogeneous than other dialects, it is more likely to be divided into several sub-dialects than any other dialect. Usually, it seems that it can be divided into five sub-dialects.
Gyeonggi dialect, also called the "Seoul dialect": spoken in the
Gyeonggi Province,
Seoul and
Incheon cities, as well as in
Kaesong,
Kaepung and
Changpung (North Korea). The basis of the standard language for South Korea.[citation needed] Although it is often called Gyeonggi dialect by combining Gyeonggi dialect and Seoul dialect, Seoul has been the capital of
Joseon for more than 500 years, so the Seoul dialect is often classified separately because the royal language is permeated. And, it is sometimes called the Gyeonggi dialect by combining the Gyeonggi dialect and the Yeongseo dialect.
Chungcheong dialect: spoken in the
Chungcheong Province (
Hoseo) region of South Korea, including the metropolitan city of
Daejeon.[7] The dialect of Chungcheong Province is a dialect with the most elements of the
Jeolla dialect among the Central dialects, and can also be divided into the other. Some parts of
South Chungcheong Province, including
Daejeon and
Sejong, are classified as southern dialects such as the Jeolla and Gyeongsang dialects.
Yeongseo dialect: spoken in
Yeongseo,
Gangwon Province (South Korea) and neighboring
Kangwon Province (North Korea) to the west of the
Taebaek Mountains. Yeongseo is quite distinct from the Yeongdong dialect to the east of the mountains. Unlike the Yeongdong dialect, the Yeongseo dialect has not been studied much because it is almost similar to the Gyeonggi dialect, and scholars often see it as just a part of Gyeonggi dialect.
Hwanghae dialect: spoken in
Hwanghae Province of North Korea. The Hwanghae dialect is a dialect with the most elements of the
Pyongan dialect among the Central dialects, and can also be divided into the other. Hwanghae dialect was commonly included among the Central dialects, but some researchers argue that it does not fit there comfortably.[9] Because the division between
South Korea and
North Korea has prolonged, the Hwanghae dialect has been strongly influenced by the Pyongan dialect, and now more and more people see it as a sub-dialect of the Pyongan dialect, not the Central dialect.
In any case, the central dialect can be said to be a dialect that can vary in various areas of the dialect depending on the criteria for the dialect compartment. For example, Hwanghae, Gyeonggi, Gangwon and Chungcheong are usually grouped together as the Central dialect region. But, many view that only Hwanghae, Gyeonggi, and Gangwon dialects are included in the central dialect, while Chungcheong dialect is considered as separate dialect.
Spoken in
Gyeongsang Province (
Yeongnam) of South Korea, including the cities of
Busan,
Daegu and
Ulsan. This dialect is easily distinguished from the Seoul dialect because its pitch is more varied. Six vowels, i, e, a, eo, o, u.[citation needed]
Spoken on
Jeju Island off the southwest coast of South Korea and is sometimes considered a separate
Koreanic language.[10] The nine vowels of
Middle Korean, including arae-a (ɔ). May have additional consonants as well.
Several linguists have suggested that a further dialect area should be split from the Northeastern dialects:[11]
Spoken in the historical
Yukchin region which is located in the northern part of
North Hamgyong Province, far removed from P'yŏng'an, but has more in common with P'yŏng'an dialects than with the surrounding Hamgyŏng dialects.[9] Since it has been isolated from the major changes of Korean language, it has preserved distinct features of Middle Korean. It is the only known tonal Korean language.[12]
A recent statistical analysis of these dialects suggests that the hierarchical structure within these dialects are highly uncertain, meaning that there is no quantitative evidence to support a family-tree-like relationship among them.[13]
Some researchers classify the Korean dialects in Western and Eastern dialects. Compared with
Middle Korean, the Western dialects have preserved
long vowels, while the Eastern dialects have preserved
tones or
pitch accent.[14] The Jeju language and some dialects in North Korean make no distinction between vowel length or tone.[14] But the Southeastern dialect and the Northeastern dialect may not be closely related to each other genealogically.
Standard language
In
South Korea,
Standard Korean (표준어/標準語/pyojun-eo) is defined by the National Institute of the Korean Language as "the modern speech of Seoul widely used by the well-cultivated" (교양있는 사람들이 두루 쓰는 현대 서울말).
Koryo-mar (Autonym: Корё мар/고려말, Standard Korean: 중앙아시아 한국어), usually identified as a descendant of the Hamgyŏng dialect, is spoken by the
Koryo-saram, ethnic Koreans in the
post-Soviet states of
Russia and
Central Asia. It consists of a Korean base vocabulary, but takes many loanwords and calques from
Russian language. It is mostly based on Hamgyong and Ryukchin dialect, since Koryo-saram people are mainly from the northern part of Hamgyong region.
Sakhalin Korean Language (사할린 한국어), usually identified as a descendant of the southern dialect, is spoken by the
Sakhalin Korean.
Yeon, Jaehoon (2012), "Korean dialects: a general survey", in Tranter, Nicolas (ed.), The Languages of Japan and Korea, Routledge, pp. 168–185,
ISBN978-0-415-46287-7. (
preprint)