This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

Korean

Romanization and Word Division

Romanization


1. General Practice

The Library of Congress will continue to follow the McCune-Reischauer system to romanize Korean with the exceptions noted in this document. See: Romanization of the Korean Language: Based upon its Phonetic Structure by G.M. McCune and E.O. Reischauer ([S.l.: s.n., 1939?), reprinted from the Transactions of the Korea Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. Full text of the original document is available online from the National Library of Australia Web site: http://www.nla.gov.au/librariesaustralia/cjk/download/ras_1939.pdf
Note: A romanization table appears as Appendix 7, at the end of this document.

2. Authorities

The Library of Congress will designate certain standard dictionaries [see Appendix 1] as final authorities to resolve questions of contemporary pronunciation. A word will be considered to be pronounced as indicated in those dictionaries, and romanized in such a way as to represent its pronunciation most accurately.

3. Conflict between Romanization Rule and Pronunciation

When romanization rules conflict with the pronunciation of a word, prefer to represent the pronunciation.

1