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词条 Nogeoldae
释义

  1. Contents

  2. Editions

  3. Translations

  4. Notes

  5. References

  6. Further reading

  7. External links

{{Infobox Korean name|img=Mongeonogeoldae in museum.jpg|

hangul=노걸대|

hanja=老乞大|

rr=Nogeoldae|

mr=Nogŏltae|


}}

The Nogeoldae ({{cjkv|c=老乞大|p=Lǎo Qǐdà|l=Old Cathayan}}) is a textbook of colloquial northern Chinese published in Korea in several editions from the 14th to 18th centuries. The book is an important source on both Late Middle Korean and the history of Mandarin Chinese. Later editions were translated into Manchu and Mongolian.

Contents

The word Geoldae of the title means "Chinese".{{sfnp|Wadley|1987|p=13}} Like the term Cathay, it is a transcription of the Mongolian form of Khitan, a people who ruled northern China as the Liao dynasty (907–1125).{{sfnp|Wilkinson|2013|p=786}}

It became a common name throughout Asia for China and all things Chinese.{{sfnp|Rimsky-Korsakoff Dyer|1983|pp=4–5}}

The book mainly consists of dialogues centred on a journey of a Korean merchant and his relatives to Beijing. It opens with the following lines:{{sfnp|Wadley|1987|p=13}}

大哥你從那裏來 "Elder brother, where do you come from?"
我從高麗王京來The city of Kaesong is here called Wangjing, the "Royal Capital" (王京, wang gyeong), as opposed to the Imperial Capital.}}
如今那裏去 "Where are you going presently?"
我往北京去In earlier versions of the text, Beijing is called by its Mongol name, Dadu.}}

On the way they are joined by Chinese travellers. After arriving in Beijing, they sell Korean commodities and purchase goods to sell back in Korea. The book concludes with their departure from Beijing.

The book focusses on the language used in travel, business, banquets and medicine.{{sfnp|Sun|1996|pp=9–10}} It also contains unique insights into life in Beijing, including the first instance of the word hutong (alley).{{sfnp|Wilkinson|2013|p=786}}

Later editions are accompanied by explanatory notes (諺解 eonhae) interleaved with the text.{{sfnp|Lee|Ramsey|2011|p=100}} Below each Chinese character are written two transcriptions in Hangul: a "left reading" taken from the "popular readings" in Shin Suk-ju's 1455 dictionary, and a "right reading" reflecting contemporary pronunciation. Each Chinese sentence is followed by a colloquial Korean translation.{{sfnp|Kim|1991|pp=15–16}}{{sfnp|Kim|1989|pp=41–42}}

Editions

Five editions of the book exist, as it was revised over the centuries to follow changes in the northern Chinese vernacular.{{sfnp|Wilkinson|2013|p=786}}

The original Chinese edition seems have been written around the middle of the 14th century.{{sfnp|Wilkinson|2013|p=786}} The Nogeoldae and a similar text, Bak Tongsa (朴通事 "Pak the interpreter"), were very popular, and are mentioned in Korean records of 1426 as required texts for government translators.{{sfnp|Sun|1996|p=8}} An early 15th century copy discovered in Daegu in 1998 is believed to be close to the original version.{{sfnp|Wilkinson|2013|p=786}} It includes valuable information on the colloquial Northern Chinese language of the Yuan dynasty, called Han'er speech (漢兒言語) in this book.

In 1480, the royal instructor ordered revisions of both textbooks to match the very different Middle Mandarin of the Ming dynasty.{{sfnp|Sun|1996|pp=8–9}} A Korean scholar, Choe Sejin, wrote a guidebook based on this edition in 1507–17.{{sfnp|Wilkinson|2013|p=786}}{{sfnp|Lee|Ramsey|2011|pp=111–112}} This edition is now conventionally called the Beonyeok Nogeoldae (飜譯老乞大 "New Translation of the 'Old Cathayan'") to distinguish it from the original.{{sfnp|Kim|1989|p=40}} The Korean versions of the dialogues are written in a colloquial style, giving unique insight into Late Middle Korean.{{sfnp|Lee|Ramsey|2011|p=100}}

A third edition, the Nogeoldae eonhae, was published in 1670 by the Office of Interpreters (司譯院 Sayeok weon).{{sfnp|Lee|Ramsey|2011|p=245}} It has the same Chinese text as the Beonyeok Nogeoldae, but the right readings and translations were updated to contemporary Korean.{{sfnp|Kim|1989|p=41}}{{sfnp|Kim|1991|p=16}}

During the Qing dynasty, the Chinese text was revised again as the Nogeoldae Sinseok (老乞大新釋 "New edition of the 'Old Cathayan'"), which was published in 1761.{{sfnp|Wilkinson|2013|p=786}} A corresponding revised commentary, the Nogeoldae sinseok eonhae, was published in 1763 but is no longer extant.{{sfnp|Kim|1989|p=41}}

The Junggan Nogeoldae (重刊老乞大 "Reprinted 'Old Cathayan'") appeared in 1795, with a corresponding commentary Junggan Nogeoldae eonhae. Its Chinese text is less colloquial than the earlier versions.{{sfnp|Wilkinson|2013|p=786}}

Translations

Translations of the Nogeoldae into other languages were also published by the Office of Interpreters. The Cheong-eo Nogeoldae (淸語老乞大 "Manchu 'Old Cathayan'") includes Manchu text along with Hangul pronunciation and Korean translations. It was written by Choe Hutaek ({{lang|ko|崔厚澤}}) and others and published in 1704 and revised in 1765. I Choedae ({{lang|ko|李最大}}) made a Mongolian edition called the Mong-eo Nogeoldae (蒙語老乞大 "Mongolian 'Old Cathayan'") that was published in 1741 and revised in 1766 and 1790.{{sfnp|Lee|Ramsey|2011|p=248}}

Notes

{{notelist}}

References

Works cited{{refbegin}}
  • {{citation

| title = A phonological study of Middle Mandarin: reflected in Korean sources of the mid-15th and early 16th centuries
| given = Kwangjo | surname = Kim
| type = PhD thesis | publisher = University of Washington | year = 1991
| oclc = 24343149
| postscript = .
  • {{citation

| title = Middle Mandarin Phonology: A Study Based on Korean Data
| given = Youngman | surname = Kim
| type = PhD thesis | publisher = Ohio State University | year = 1989
| oclc = 753733450
| postscript = .
  • {{citation

| title = A History of the Korean Language
| given1 = Ki-Moon | surname1 = Lee
| given2 = S. Robert | surname2 = Ramsey
| publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 2011
| isbn = 978-1-139-49448-9
| postscript = .
  • {{citation

| given = Svetlana | surname = Rimsky-Korsakoff Dyer
| title = Grammatical analysis of the Lao Ch'i-ta: with an English translation of the Chinese text
| publisher = Faculty of Asian Studies, Australian National University | year = 1983
| isbn = 978-0-909879-18-1
| postscript = .
  • {{citation

| title = Word-order Change and Grammaticalization in the History of Chinese
| given = Chaofen | surname = Sun
| publisher = Stanford University Press | year = 1996
| isbn = 978-0-8047-2418-0
| postscript = .
  • {{citation

| title = A translation of the "Lao Qida" and investigation into certain of its syntactic structures
| given = Stephen Alexander | surname = Wadley
| publisher = University of Washington | year = 1987
| type = PhD thesis
| oclc = 15926747
| postscript = .
  • {{citation

| given = Endymion | surname = Wilkinson | author-link = Endymion Wilkinson
| title = A New Manual
| publisher = Harvard University Press | location = Cambridge, MA
| year = 2013
| isbn = 978-0-674-06715-8
| postscript = .{{refend}}

Further reading

{{refbegin}}
  • {{citation

| title = The Study of Foreign Languages in the Yi Dynasty (1392–1910): Part Three, Books for the Study of Foreign Languages (2)
| surname = Song | given = Ki-Joong
| journal = Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities | year = 1982 | volume = 56 | pages = 1–57
| publisher = Center for Korean Research | location = Seoul
| postscript = . | ref = none{{refend}}

External links

  • {{Internet Archive|chunggannogoltae00nogo|Junggan Nogeoldae}}
  • {{Internet Archive|chunggannogoltae018800|Junggan Nogeoldae onhae, vol. 1}}
  • {{Internet Archive|chunggannogoltae028800|Junggan Nogeoldae onhae, vol. 2}}
  • Text based on the Nogeoldae eonhae

2 : Chinese-language education|Korean language

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