Scholarly Articles on Gyeongsang Satoori
AKA Kyungsang Dialects
Want to learn Daegu Satoori (North Gyeongsangdo)? What about Busan Satoori (South Gyeongsangdo)? Or at least want to understand them?
At least I do. Every since I heard BTS’s Satoori Rap I knew I wanted to learn Daegu satoori (anyone else’s bias Yoongi?? lmao yall can hmu on my kpop blog @mint-suga).
So for several hours yesterday because I’m an obsessive linguistics nerd I scoured the internet for articles on Gyeongsang satoori and here is the fruit of my labor.
If you don’t know the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), you probably will need an interactive IPA chart. When you see some funny-looking symbols that are said to correspond to sounds in the articles, you can just go here and see what the symbols sound like.
All right, so below are all the articles I’ve found on Gyeongsang Satoori that seem useful for learning its dialects:
(Every other line is itlaicized to facilitate finding where the titles begin and end)
All dialects:
Your One-Stop Guide to Korean Dialects (blog)
Speakers of tonal and non-tonal Korean dialects use different cue weightings in the perception of the three-way laryngeal stop contrast
Perception and production of English stops by tonal and non-tonal Korean dialect speakers
General Gyeongsang Satoori:
Word-specific effects on sound change of the lexical pitch accent in Kyungsang Korean
North Gyeongsang Satoori:
The characteristics of the North Gyeongsang Dialect (in Korean)
The prosodic structure and pitch accent of Northern Kyungsang Korean
The lexical tone system of North Kyungsang Korean
Tone, segments, and their interaction in North Kyungsang Korean: a correspondence theoretic account
South Gyeongsang Satoori:
The nominal pitch accent system of Southern Kyungsang Korean
Effects of tone on the three-way laryngeal distinction in Korean: An acoustic and aerodynamic comparison of the Seoul and South Kyungsang dialects
Accent classes in South Kyengsang Korean: Lexical drift, novel words and loanwords
A diachronic investigation of the vowels and fricatives in Korean: An acoustic comparison of the Seoul and South Kyungsang dialects
I might be adding more to this, so be sure to look for updates!
Happy learning!










