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Yale romanisation of Korean : ウィキペディア英語版
Yale romanization of Korean

The Yale romanization of Korean was developed by Samuel Elmo Martin and his colleagues at Yale University about half a decade after McCune–Reischauer. It is the standard romanization of the Korean language in linguistics.
The Yale system places primary emphasis on showing a word's morphophonemic structure. This distinguishes it from the other two widely used systems for romanizing Korean, the Revised Romanization of Korean (RR) and McCune–Reischauer. These two usually provide the pronunciation for an entire word, but the morphophonemic elements accounting for that pronunciation often cannot be recovered from the romanizations, which makes them ill-suited for linguistic use. In terms of morphophonemic content, the Yale system's approach can be compared to North Korea's former New Korean Orthography.
The Yale system tries to use a single consistent spelling for each morphophonemic element irrespective of its context. But Yale and Hangul differ in how back vowels are handled.
Yale may be used for both modern Korean and Middle Korean. There are separate rules for Middle Korean. Martin's 1992 Reference Grammar of Korean uses italics for Middle Korean as well as other texts predating the 1933 abandonment of ''arae a'', whereas it shows current language in boldface.
==Vowels==
Yale writes the basic vowels as ''a'', ''e'', ''o'', and ''u''. The vowels that are written to the right in Hangul () are written as ''a'' or ''e'', and the vowels that are written below () are ''o'' or ''u''. Yale indicates fronting of a vowel, written in Hangul as an additional final stroke , by a final ''-y''. Palatalization is shown by a medial ''-y-''. Although Hangul treats the rounded back vowels () of Middle Korean as simple vowels, the Yale system writes them as a basic vowel () combined with a medial ''-w-''.

*
Since modern standard Korean has lost the vowel (''arae a''), the medial ''w'', used to distinguish it from ''wo'' in Middle Korean, can be omitted. Thus it is important to consider the time period in question when interpreting Yale romanization.

*
*
As this ''w'' isn't phonemically distinctive after labial consonants in modern Korean, the Yale system omits it in that context, merging hangul (RR ''u'') and (RR ''eu''). Thus, there is not a one-to-one correspondence in the spelling of back vowels.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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