Dictionnaire Hangeul-Hanja/Hanja-Hangeul


Découvrez des conversions Hangeul-Hanja sans faille grâce à notre dictionnaire en ligne avancé. Maîtrisez les personnages coréens et les hanja avec des fonctionnalités conviviales conçues pour tous les niveaux. Entrez Hangeul ou Hanja ci-dessous et cliquez sur Rechercher vers le haut.

영무 Résultat de recherche

Hangeul Hanja Explication
영무 光榮無雙
영무 국영貿易
영무욕신 無榮無辱身
영무 英武
영무 榮武
영무 靈武
영무 榮茂
영무전본 英武殿本
영문영무 英文英武
영무 永永無窮
인명영무 仁明英武
영무 趙英茂

Hanja (한자, 漢字) refers to Chinese characters adapted into the Korean language, historically serving as the primary writing system in Korea for over a millennium before the invention of Hangeul in the 15th century. Rooted in classical Chinese, Hanja played a foundational role in shaping Korean vocabulary, particularly in academic, legal, religious, and literary contexts. Approximately 60% of modern Korean words derive from Sino-Korean roots, making Hanja essential for understanding nuanced meanings, homonyms, and specialized terminology in fields like law, medicine, or history.

Although Hangeul, Korea’s phonetic alphabet, replaced Hanja as the everyday script, Hanja remains culturally and linguistically significant. It is still used in official documents, personal names, historical texts, and newspaper headlines to clarify meaning or convey formality. For learners, studying Hanja enhances vocabulary retention, deepens comprehension of compound words (e.g., “학교” [學校, school] or “의사” [醫師, doctor]), and bridges connections with other East Asian languages like Chinese and Japanese.

Today, Hanja is taught selectively in South Korean schools, often as an elective, but its legacy persists as a key to unlocking Korea’s literary heritage and linguistic precision. Whether deciphering ancient texts or modern jargon, Hanja remains a vital thread in the tapestry of Korean language and culture.

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