난무
Korean
Etymology
Sino-Korean word from 亂舞 (“wild dance; raucous dance”). Compare Japanese 乱舞 (ranbu).
Pronunciation
- (SK Standard/Seoul) IPA(key): [ˈna̠(ː)nmu]
- Phonetic hangul: [난(ː)무]
- Though still prescribed in Standard Korean, most speakers in both Koreas no longer distinguish vowel length.
Romanizations | |
---|---|
Revised Romanization? | nanmu |
Revised Romanization (translit.)? | nanmu |
McCune–Reischauer? | nanmu |
Yale Romanization? | nānmu |
Noun
South Korean Standard Language |
난무(亂舞) (nanmu) |
---|---|
North Korean Standard Language |
란무(亂舞) (ranmu) |
난무 • (nanmu) (hanja 亂舞)
- wild dance; dance without a choreography
- 2020 February 16, “조선시대 사형집행인, 망나니 [joseonsidae sahyeongjiphaeng'in, mangnani]”, in unipress.co.kr:
- 형을 집행할 때 망나니는 칼을 머리 위로 쳐든 채 잠시 동안 난무를 추고, 스스로 흥분 상태에 들어간 때 그 여세로 칼을 내리쳐 한칼에 참했다고 한다.
- Hyeong-eul jiphaenghal ttae mangnani-neun kar-eul meori wi-ro cheodeun chae jamsi dong'an nanmu-reul chugo, seuseuro heungbun sangtae-e deureogan ttae geu yeose-ro kar-eul naericheo hankar-e chamhaetdago handa.
- He reports that when carrying out the sentence, the executioner would raise the sword above the head and dance wildly for a few moments; once he had entered a state of excitation, he would use that momentum to bring down the blade and decapitate [the criminal] in a single stroke.
- (figuratively, derogatory) rampage, wild proliferation
Derived terms
- 난무(亂舞)하다 (nanmuhada)
- 난무장(亂舞場) (nanmujang)
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