-이-

See also: and -이

Korean

Etymology 1

From Middle Korean -이〮- (-í-), an allomorph of -기〮- (Yale: -kí-, causative/passive-deriving suffix) formed by lenition of the initial consonant /k-/ in intervocalic environments. Beyond Middle Korean, the causative is the original meaning as attested in Old Korean, and the passive is a later development from the causative first attested in the written language some time between the thirteenth and fifteenth centuries.[1][2]

Pronunciation

Romanizations
Revised Romanization?-i-
Revised Romanization (translit.)?i
McCune–Reischauer?i
Yale Romanization?i
  • (after vowels): usually a change in vowel quality
    • IPA(key): /a/ to /ɛ~e/
    • IPA(key): /ʌ/ to /e/
    • IPA(key): /o/ to /ø~we/
    • IPA(key): /u/ to /y~wi/

Suffix

(-i-)

  1. A verbal suffix deriving the stems of causative verbs, attaching to verb or adjective stems which end in a vowel, an aspirate consonant, (-k), or (-l). No longer productive.
    Synonyms: (-hi-), (-ri-), (-gi-), (-u-), (-gu-), (-chu-)
    먹다 (meokda, to eat) + (-i-)먹이다 (meogida, to feed)
    높다 (nopda, to be high) + (-i-)높이다 (nopida, to highten)
    나다 (nada, to exit) + (-i-)내다 (naeda, to take out)
  2. A verbal suffix deriving the stems of passive verbs, mainly attaching to verb stems ending in a vowel or in an aspirate consonant. No longer productive.
    Synonyms: (-hi-), (-ri-), (-gi-)
    놓다 (nota, to place) + (-i-)놓이다 (noida, to be placed)
    보다 (boda, to see) + (-i-)보이다 (boida, to be seen)
    바꾸다 (bakkuda, to change) (transitive) + (-i-)바뀌다 (bakkwida, to change, to be changed)
Usage notes

Although still very common in Korean, the causative/passive suffixes are no longer productive for forming new verbs. Verbs that do not already have a morphological causative or passive must employ auxiliaries:

The causative/passive suffixes (-i-), (-hi-), (-ri-), and (-gi-) all stem from the same etymon, and are fairly complementary in distribution. attaches to verb stems which end in a vowel or an aspirate consonant, and (in the case of causative verbs only) to stems ending in (-k) and some of those ending in (-l).

Etymology 2

From Middle Korean -ᅌᅵ- (Yale: -ngì-, deferential/self-humbling suffix). See the main entry for more.

Suffix

(-i-)

  1. Post-vowel and post-liquid allomorphic form of 으이 (-eu'i-, (Gyeongsang) polite deferential suffix).

References

  1. Vovin, Alexander (2010) Koreo-Japonica: A Re-evaluation of a Genetic Origin, University of Hawaii Press, →ISBN, page 6
  2. 장윤희 (2006), 고대국어의 파생접미사 연구 [A study of Old Korean derivational suffixes]”, in Gugyeol yeon-gu, volume 47
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