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Ju Si-gyeong

Ju Si-gyeong (주시경 ; 周時經) (December 22, 1876 - July 27, 1914) (Chu Si-gyǒng in McCune-Reischauer) was one of the founders of modern Korean linguistics. His courtesy name was Sangho (상호 ; 相鎬). He was born in Bongsan Prefecture (봉산군 ; 鳳山郡), Hwanghae Province. He and his students helped standarize Korean, based on the vernacular spelling and grammar.

He has studied the Chinese language since a youngster. After studying modern linguistics in Seoul, he established Korean Language System Society (조선문동식회; 朝鮮文同式會) in 1896. He hosted several seminars in the National Language Discussion Centre of the Sangdong Youth Academy (-동-; 尚洞青年學院國語講習所).

He proposed that the Korean parts of speech include nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, unconjugation adjectives (관형사 ; 冠形詞), auxiliaries (助詞), conjunction, exclamations, and stop word (?) (종지사 ; 終止詞).

In his 1914 publication, Sounds of the Final Day (?) promotes writing Han-geul horizontally.

Table of contents
1 Publications
2 Miscellaneous
3 External links

Publications

Miscellaneous

He is the person who coined the name "Han-geul," which had existed until several other names until then.

His name is sometimes written without the disambiguity hyphen: Ju Sigyeong and Chu Sigyong. In this case, they are often mispronounced as Sig-yeong and Sig-yong respectively.

External links

See also List of Koreans.




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