Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
J.H.Peter Choi
Where does 'sino-' come from?
I often read some article about "Sino-number or Sino-" in questions and answers. I am a native Korean, definitely, I was born in Korea and I use Korean language. I think I know Hangul very well but, I have no idea what the sino means where it comes from. I have never heard of it before, so I googled and I found some explanation in Wiki pedia, but there is no explanation about its origin. Sino sounds like some 'Japanese related word', but I am not quite sure. Does anybody know where it come from and what does exactly mean?
17 mars 2013 00:58
Réponses · 4
1
The prefix Sino- comes from the Latin "Sinae" and it means "China." Sino-Korean words and numbers are a part of the Korean language but their origin is Chinese.
17 mars 2013
Sino = Chinese = 汉/漢
17 mars 2013
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J.H.Peter Choi
Compétences linguistiques
Anglais, Japonais, Coréen, Télougou
Langue étudiée
Anglais, Japonais, Télougou
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