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Kalimat Interogatif Dialek Gyeongsang dalam Reply 1997 Carlissa, Adinda Noviana; Adnyana, Putu Pramania
Paradigma: Jurnal Kajian Budaya Vol. 12, No. 1
Publisher : UI Scholars Hub

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Abstract

The Gyeongsang dialect is phonologically and morphologically unique, yet current research generally focuses only on its prosody characteristics. Research related to language style and sentence-final ending in the Gyeongsang dialect has received less attention. Therefore, this study focuses on sentence-final ending or jeongyeol eomi in Korean interrogative sentences to fill the research gap. This research is qualitative research with a descriptive analysis method. Data is collected from the Korean drama Reply 1997 from the first three episodes. The result shows that a closed-ended interrogative sentence is the type of interrogative sentence most commonly used in the data, while the most widely used language style is plain style (haerache). The use of question words in an interrogative sentence in the Gyeongsang dialect also determines the variation of sentence-final ending used. The sentence-final ending ended in [o] sound, such as -go, -no, must be used for an open-ended interrogative sentence with question words. Sentence final ending ended in [a] sound, such as -ga, -na, must be used for a close-ended interrogative sentence with no question words.
CONTRASTIVE STUDY OF CLOSED INTERROGATIVE SENTENCE IN KOREAN AND INDONESIAN LANGUAGE Pertiwi, Diyah Hayuning; Adnyana, Putu Pramania
LLT Journal: A Journal on Language and Language Teaching Vol 26, No 2 (2023): October 2023
Publisher : English Education Study Programme of Sanata Dharma University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.24071/llt.v26i2.5270

Abstract

This study discusses Korean and Indonesian morphosyntactic characteristics of closed interrogative sentences. The method used is descriptive qualitative with literature review and contrastive analysis. The results showed that there were differences and similarities in terms of closed interrogative markers, sentence structure, and sentence negation. The first difference in closed interrogative markers is that the marker in Korean is an interrogative sentence-ending (eomi) at the end of a sentence rather than a question word, whereas the marker in Indonesian is the question word apa at the beginning of the sentence and particle -kah at the beginning, middle or end of the sentence. Second, there are differences and similarities in sentence construction. Subjects that refer to the second person are omitted in Korean, whereas in Indonesian, the subject is required. The parallels lie in the fact that the predicate is a necessary component of sentence structure and that the presence of the object depends on the kind of verb used as the predicate. Thirdly, there is a distinction between Korean and Indonesian sentence negation in that Korean has a wider range of negation forms.
PANDANGAN TENTANG PRAKTIK BEDAH PLASTIK DALAM ARTIKEL OPINI DI SURAT KABAR KOREA TAHUN 2010–2019 Adnyana, Putu Pramania; Muta'ali, Abdul; Suganda, Sonya Puspasari
Paradigma: Jurnal Kajian Budaya
Publisher : UI Scholars Hub

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Abstract

This research aims to reveal Korean’s perspectives on plastic surgery practices through a corpus-based text analysis of Korean online newspapers. The research used quantitative and qualitative methods to observe keywords, significant collocates, and semantic preference. The data used were 106 opinion articles about plastic surgery in Chosun Ilbo and Donga Ilbo (2010–2019). Keyword analysis shows that the most frequently used keywords are seonghyeong (189 times) and seonghyeongsusul (116 times). Analysis of significant collocates and semantic preferences revealed that plastic surgery was frequently discussed in relation to body parts, people (collocate yeoseong (women), junggukin (Chinese), hwanja (patient), gwangganggek (tourist)), country (collocate jungguk (China), hangguk (Korea)), intensity (gwadohan (excessive)), and effect (phihae (loss)), and others. Plastic surgery clinics are frequently addressed in terms of location (collocate Gangnam, Seoul), intensity (collocate daehyong (big scale)), and others. Based on the findings of this study, plastic surgery is primarily performed on local women and international patients, particularly Chinese tourists. Plastic surgery is also perceived as having a negative impact, being overdone, and causing numerous difficulties. Plastic surgery performed on foreign patients is considered as beneficial to Korean economic progress, but it should not be performed on Koreans.
Penguasaan Konsonan Aspirasi Bahasa Korea Pemelajar Orang Indonesia Meutia, Fitri; Faisal, Rahmad; Dessiar, Achmad Rio; Lubis, Arif Husein; Adnyana, Putu Pramania; Hilma, Ananda Adella; Ningrum, Tantri Pramudita
JLA (Jurnal Lingua Applicata) Vol 8, No 2 (2025)
Publisher : DBSMB, Vocational College of Universitas Gadjah Mada

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.22146/jla.105272

Abstract

This research aims to determine the understanding ability of aspirated consonants ㅋ (kh), ㅌ (th), ㅍ (ph) of second and third-year Korean language students and whether there are significant differences between each group of participants. The participants in this study included 20 second-year and 20 third-year Korean language students at National University, as well as 20 comparison groups of native Korean speakers. To determine the understanding of these groups, a listening test known as the identification test was administered. The test consisted of 10 sentences in which each sentence contained a word containing the Korean aspirated letters ㅋ (kh), ㅌ (th), and ㅍ (ph). From the results of this test, the average score of native Korean speakers obtained a score of 98, second-year students obtained an average score of 43, and third-year students obtained an average score of 38.5. Then, to find out whether there is a difference between each group, especially the native speakers and Korean language students,  ANOVA statistical test was conducted, the test results found that there was a highly significant difference between native Korean speakers and second-year students with a significance value of 0.00 (sig < 0.05), native Korean speakers and third-year students with a significance value of 0.00 (sig < 0.05), and there was no difference between second-year and third-year students with a significance value of 0.612 (sig > 0.05). This means that native speakers of Korean have high consonant understanding, while second and third year students have very low aspirated consonant understanding ability.