Korean, most speakers in both Koreas no longer distinguish vowel length. <span class="searchmatch">울다</span> • (ulda) (infinitive 울어, sequential 우니) (intransitive) to cry; to weep 지금...
See also: -우다 IPA(key): /ǔl.tá/, [ǔ.dá] 우〯다〮 (wǔtá) (infinitive 우러〮, sequential 우르〮니〮) to cry; to weep Korean: <span class="searchmatch">울다</span> (ulda)...
sori-reul naeda ― to make a whistling sound crying harshly, with a harsh cry 삐 <span class="searchmatch">울다</span> ― ppi ulda ― to cry out sharply 삐 • (ppi) Gyeongsang and Jeolla dialect form...
From 우는 (uneun, “crying”, adjective form of <span class="searchmatch">울다</span> (ulda)) + 토끼 (tokki, “rabbit”). (SK Standard/Seoul) IPA(key): [ˈu(ː)nɯntʰo̞k͈i] Phonetic hangul: [우(ː)는토끼]...
Phonetic hangul: [우레] 우레 • (ure) thunder Synonym: 천둥 (cheondung, “thunder”) 우레가 <span class="searchmatch">울다</span> ure-ga ulda The thunder rolls. 울음 (ureum, “cry”) 우렁차다 (ureongchada, “to be...
wept sadly day and night. This adverb has very dominant usage with the verb <span class="searchmatch">울다</span> (ulda, “to cry”), making some people consider the combination an idiom or...
suffix starts with ㅅ, it causes the root ㄹ to elide, e.g. 우세요 (useyo) from <span class="searchmatch">울다</span> (ulda) Sometimes to avoid confusion with imperative mood, -셔요 (-syeoyo) can...
from Proto-Turkic *ūlï- (“to cry, howl”). Altaicists compare it to Korean <span class="searchmatch">울다</span> (ulda, “to cry, weep, neigh”), Mongolian улих (ulix, “to yawn, howl, cry out”)...
Kazakh: жылау (jylau) Khiamniungan Naga: hīap Khmer: យំ (km) (yum) Korean: <span class="searchmatch">울다</span> (ko) (ulda), 흐느끼다 (heuneukkida) Kumyk: йыламакъ (yılamaq) Kurdish: Central...
Kalmyk: уульх (uulʹx) Kazakh: жылау (jylau) Khmer: យំ (km) (yum) Korean: <span class="searchmatch">울다</span> (ko) (ulda) Kurdish: Central Kurdish: گریان (giryan) Northern Kurdish: girîn (ku)...