Ju Si-gyeong explained

Ju Si-gyeong
Birth Date:22 December 1876
Birth Place:Pongsan-gun, Hwanghae-do, Joseon
Occupation:Linguist
Known For:Early contributions to Korean linguistics, naming Hangul
Module:
Hangul:주시경
Rr:Ju Sigyeong
Mr:Chu Sigyŏng
Hangulho:한힌샘, 한흰메
Rrho:Hanhinsaem, Hanhuinme
Mrho:Hanhinsaem, Hanhŭinme
Hangulja:상호
Rrja:Sangho
Mrja:Sangho
Child:yes

Ju Sigyeong (; December 22, 1876 – July 27, 1914) was one of the founders of modern Korean linguistics. He was born in Pongsan-gun, Hwanghae-do in 1876. He helped to standardize the Korean language, based on the spelling and grammar of vernacular Korean.

Biography

Ju Sigyeong was born in Hwanghae Province, in what is now North Korea. He studied Classical Chinese from an early age. In 1887 he moved to Seoul and studied linguistics.[1] In 1896, he found work in the first Hangeul-only newspaper, Dongnip Sinmun, founded by the Korean independence activist Seo Jae-pil. In 1897, Seo Jae-pil was sent into exile to the United States, and Ju Sigyeong left the newspaper.

Interested in Western linguistics and teaching methods, Ju Sigyeong served as a Korean instructor for the American missionary William B. Scranton, founder of today's Ewha Womans University.

Standardizing Korean Language

Having realized the need of a standardized Korean alphabet, Ju Sigyeong established the Korean Language System Society (Korean: 조선문동식회; 朝鮮文同式會) in 1886 along with several of his colleagues. Ju also hosted several seminars in the National Language Discussion Centre of the Sangdong Youth Academy of the Korean language (Korean: 상동청년학원국어강습소; 尚洞青年學院國語講習所).

Ju proposed that the Korean parts of speech include nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, unconjugated adjectives (Korean: 관형사; 冠形詞), auxiliaries (Korean: 조사; 助詞), conjunctions, exclamations, and sentence-final particles (Korean: 종지사; 終止詞). Ju Sigyeong coined the name Hangul (Korean: 한글) between 1910 and 1913 to identify the Korean writing system, which had previously existed under several other names, such as eonmun (Korean: 언문, vernacular script), since the 15th century.

In his 1914 publication, Sounds of the Language (Korean: 말의 소리), he promoted writing Hangul linearly rather than syllabically. This is one of his few proposals not to have been implemented in modern Korean linguistics, although there have been experiments with linear Hangul, most notably in Primorsky Krai.

Publications

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hangeul : Korea's unique alphabet. 2010. Seoul Selection. Han'guk Kukche Kyoryu Chaedan.. 978-89-91913-69-1. Seoul, Korea. 701026158.