삼나라
Korean
Etymology
Perhaps 삼(三) (sam, “three”) + 나라 (nara, “country”), from 삼한 (三韓, samhan, “Three Han”), an ancient name for Korea.
Pronunciation
- (SK Standard/Seoul) IPA(key): [sʰa̠mna̠ɾa̠]
- Phonetic hangul: [삼나라]
Romanizations | |
---|---|
Revised Romanization? | Samnara |
Revised Romanization (translit.)? | Samnala |
McCune–Reischauer? | Samnara |
Yale Romanization? | samnala |
Proper noun
삼나라 • (Samnara)
- A mythical version of Korea featuring in the shamanic narrative of Princess Bari.
- 2009, “노들제 바리공주 자료 [Transcript of Princess Bari from the Nodeul-je ceremony]”, in Han'guk Musokhak, volume 18, pages 261—310:
- 대왕마마 삼나라 치국을 하셔도
내전이 공허하고 중전이 비었으니 […]- daewang-mama Samnara chigug-eul hasyeodo
naejeon-i gongheo-hago jungjeon-i bieosseuni […] - Though His Majesty governed the Sam kingdom, his private room was vacant; his queen's seat was empty […]
- daewang-mama Samnara chigug-eul hasyeodo
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