끝장

Korean

Etymology

(kkeut, end, final) + 장(張) (jang, page (of a book), counter for paper).

Pronunciation

Romanizations
Revised Romanization?kkeutjang
Revised Romanization (translit.)?kkeutjang
McCune–Reischauer?kkŭtchang
Yale Romanization?kkuthcang

Noun

끝장 • (kkeutjang)

  1. (literal) the final page
  2. the very end, a final situation with nothing left
    • 2019, 이철희 [icheolhui, Yi Cheol-hui], “하노이 담판, 실패도 선택이다 [hanoi dampan, silpaedo seontaegida]”, in Donga Ilbo:
      하노이 정상회담 열흘 으로 다가왔다. [] 두고두고 후환 남길 불완전한 합의보다 끝장까지 보는 '눈부신 실패' 나을 있다.
      Bung-mi hanoi jeongsanghoedam-i yeolheul ap-euro dagawatda. [ ] dugodugo huhwan-eul namgil burwanjeonhan habuiboda-neun kkeutjang-kkaji gaboneun nunbusin silpae ga na'eul su itda.
      The North Korea-United States Hanoi Summit is only ten days away. [] A "glorious failure" after trying to reach the very end [i.e. with nothing left open for discussion] may be preferable to an incomplete agreement whose negative repercussions will linger on and on.
  3. a doomed situation
    창문 엄마 우리 끝장이야.
    Changmun kkaen geo eomma-ga almyeon uri kkeutjang-iya.
    If Mom finds out that we broke the window, we're doomed.

Derived terms

  • 끝장나다 (kkeutjangnada, “to be terminated, to be doomed”)
  • 끝장내다 (kkeutjangnaeda, “to terminate, to doom”)
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