50 | ||
← 4 | 5 | 6 → |
---|---|---|
Native isol.: 다섯 (daseot) Native attr.: 다섯 (daseot), (archaic) 닷 (dat) Sino-Korean: 오 (o) Hanja: 五 Ordinal: 다섯째 (daseotjjae) |
First attested in the Yongbi eocheon'ga (龍飛御天歌 / 용비어천가), 1447, as Middle Korean 다ᄉᆞᆺ〮 (Yale: tàsós).
Beyond Middle Korean, the reconstruction of the ancestral Koreanic root for "five" is difficult. See a list of relevant attestations and forms in Appendix:Historical Koreanic numerals#Five.
Romanizations | |
---|---|
Revised Romanization? | daseot |
Revised Romanization (translit.)? | daseos |
McCune–Reischauer? | tasŏt |
Yale Romanization? | tases |
다섯 • (daseot)
In modern Korean, numbers are usually written in Arabic numerals.
The Korean language has two sets of numerals: a native set of numerals inherited from Old Korean, and a Sino-Korean set which was borrowed from Middle Chinese in the first millennium C.E.
Native classifiers take native numerals.
Some Sino-Korean classifiers take native numerals, others take Sino-Korean numerals, while yet others take both.
Recently loaned classifiers generally take Sino-Korean numerals.
For many terms, a native numeral has a quantifying sense, whereas a Sino-Korean numeral has a sense of labeling.
When used in isolation, native numerals refer to objects of that number and are used in counting and quantifying, whereas Sino-Korean numerals refer to the numbers in a more mathematical sense.
While older stages of Korean had native numerals up to the thousands, native numerals currently exist only up to ninety-nine, and Sino-Korean is used for all higher numbers. There is also a tendency—particularly among younger speakers—to uniformly use Sino-Korean numerals for the higher tens as well, so that native numerals such as 일흔 (ilheun, “seventy”) or 아흔 (aheun, “ninety”) are becoming less common.