송나라
Korean
Etymology
송(宋) (Song) + 나라 (-nara, suffix for Chinese polities).
Pronunciation
- (SK Standard/Seoul) IPA(key): [sʰo̞ŋna̠ɾa̠]
- Phonetic hangul: [송나라]
Romanizations | |
---|---|
Revised Romanization? | Songnara |
Revised Romanization (translit.)? | Songnala |
McCune–Reischauer? | Songnara |
Yale Romanization? | songnala |
Proper noun
송나라 • (Songnara)
- (historical) various Chinese polities named 송 (宋, Song), notably:
- the Song state, a small ancient kingdom in central China that was destroyed in 286 BCE
- the Liu Song, a dynasty that ruled southern China from 420 to 479 CE
- the Song, an empire known for its scientific and cultural achievements that ruled most of China between 960 and 1127 and its southern half between 1127 and 1276; this is the usual referent of the term.
Coordinate terms
- (Chinese unifying dynasties)
- 하나라 (Hanara)
- 은나라 (Eunnara)
- 주나라 (Junara)
- 진나라 (Jinnara)
- 한나라 (Hannara)
- 수나라 (Sunara)
- 당나라 (Dangnara)
- 송나라 (Songnara)
- 원나라 (Wonnara)
- 명나라 (Myeongnara)
- 청나라 (Cheongnara)