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What is the difference between 서고 and 도서관?
The Next CEO of Stack OverflowWhat's the difference between 마지막으로 and 드디어?필요하다, 필요 있다, 필요로 하다 : what's the difference in meaning and usage?What are the differences in usage and meaning between 아름답다, 예쁘다, 이쁘다 and 곱다?What is the difference between 방금 and 금방?What's the difference between '탕' and '국'?What are the differences in usage and meaning between 천천하다 and 느리다 meaning 'slow'?Translation for “wedding night” - what are the differences between 신혼 여행 밤, 결혼 첫날 밤, and 신혼 첫날밤, and are there any alternatives to these?Is there any difference in '악마' and '마귀', meaning 'devil'?How to say “to” as a linking word between verbs in Korean?What does 사자 in this picture mean?
I know 도서관 is commonly used, but it's my first time hearing 서고 and the meaning is also library. Is there any differences between them?
vocabulary
add a comment |
I know 도서관 is commonly used, but it's my first time hearing 서고 and the meaning is also library. Is there any differences between them?
vocabulary
add a comment |
I know 도서관 is commonly used, but it's my first time hearing 서고 and the meaning is also library. Is there any differences between them?
vocabulary
I know 도서관 is commonly used, but it's my first time hearing 서고 and the meaning is also library. Is there any differences between them?
vocabulary
vocabulary
asked 4 hours ago
ArinArin
1567
1567
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On this point I think the Korea University Korean Language Dictionary makes good sense.
도서관: 온갖 출판물이나 기록물들을 모아서 보관해 두고 사람들이 이용할 수 있도록 한 시설.
서고: 책을 넣어 두는 방이나 집.
So, roughly translating, 도서관 is a facility where you store various publications and records for people to make use of it. 서고 is a room or a building where you store books.
To call a facility a "도서관", you would expect some level of publicity. Like a public library where anyone can come register an use, a university library where any student of the school can come and use, or even if you say some 도서관 is "private", I would imagine a close-access facility where only those with permission can enter for research, but not a very private room like you would expect no-one but yourself there. A bibliophile may have a 서고 in his own house, but hardly a 도서관. You can expect to find some video materials or newspapers at a 도서관, but the word 서고 does not imply that. If a 도서관 has more books than it's open-access hall can house, it would put the other books in a closed-access 서고, or as the dictionary put it, "a room where they store books."
So I would say the more general translation of "a library" would be 도서관, but 서고 may fit only given the right context.
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
On this point I think the Korea University Korean Language Dictionary makes good sense.
도서관: 온갖 출판물이나 기록물들을 모아서 보관해 두고 사람들이 이용할 수 있도록 한 시설.
서고: 책을 넣어 두는 방이나 집.
So, roughly translating, 도서관 is a facility where you store various publications and records for people to make use of it. 서고 is a room or a building where you store books.
To call a facility a "도서관", you would expect some level of publicity. Like a public library where anyone can come register an use, a university library where any student of the school can come and use, or even if you say some 도서관 is "private", I would imagine a close-access facility where only those with permission can enter for research, but not a very private room like you would expect no-one but yourself there. A bibliophile may have a 서고 in his own house, but hardly a 도서관. You can expect to find some video materials or newspapers at a 도서관, but the word 서고 does not imply that. If a 도서관 has more books than it's open-access hall can house, it would put the other books in a closed-access 서고, or as the dictionary put it, "a room where they store books."
So I would say the more general translation of "a library" would be 도서관, but 서고 may fit only given the right context.
add a comment |
On this point I think the Korea University Korean Language Dictionary makes good sense.
도서관: 온갖 출판물이나 기록물들을 모아서 보관해 두고 사람들이 이용할 수 있도록 한 시설.
서고: 책을 넣어 두는 방이나 집.
So, roughly translating, 도서관 is a facility where you store various publications and records for people to make use of it. 서고 is a room or a building where you store books.
To call a facility a "도서관", you would expect some level of publicity. Like a public library where anyone can come register an use, a university library where any student of the school can come and use, or even if you say some 도서관 is "private", I would imagine a close-access facility where only those with permission can enter for research, but not a very private room like you would expect no-one but yourself there. A bibliophile may have a 서고 in his own house, but hardly a 도서관. You can expect to find some video materials or newspapers at a 도서관, but the word 서고 does not imply that. If a 도서관 has more books than it's open-access hall can house, it would put the other books in a closed-access 서고, or as the dictionary put it, "a room where they store books."
So I would say the more general translation of "a library" would be 도서관, but 서고 may fit only given the right context.
add a comment |
On this point I think the Korea University Korean Language Dictionary makes good sense.
도서관: 온갖 출판물이나 기록물들을 모아서 보관해 두고 사람들이 이용할 수 있도록 한 시설.
서고: 책을 넣어 두는 방이나 집.
So, roughly translating, 도서관 is a facility where you store various publications and records for people to make use of it. 서고 is a room or a building where you store books.
To call a facility a "도서관", you would expect some level of publicity. Like a public library where anyone can come register an use, a university library where any student of the school can come and use, or even if you say some 도서관 is "private", I would imagine a close-access facility where only those with permission can enter for research, but not a very private room like you would expect no-one but yourself there. A bibliophile may have a 서고 in his own house, but hardly a 도서관. You can expect to find some video materials or newspapers at a 도서관, but the word 서고 does not imply that. If a 도서관 has more books than it's open-access hall can house, it would put the other books in a closed-access 서고, or as the dictionary put it, "a room where they store books."
So I would say the more general translation of "a library" would be 도서관, but 서고 may fit only given the right context.
On this point I think the Korea University Korean Language Dictionary makes good sense.
도서관: 온갖 출판물이나 기록물들을 모아서 보관해 두고 사람들이 이용할 수 있도록 한 시설.
서고: 책을 넣어 두는 방이나 집.
So, roughly translating, 도서관 is a facility where you store various publications and records for people to make use of it. 서고 is a room or a building where you store books.
To call a facility a "도서관", you would expect some level of publicity. Like a public library where anyone can come register an use, a university library where any student of the school can come and use, or even if you say some 도서관 is "private", I would imagine a close-access facility where only those with permission can enter for research, but not a very private room like you would expect no-one but yourself there. A bibliophile may have a 서고 in his own house, but hardly a 도서관. You can expect to find some video materials or newspapers at a 도서관, but the word 서고 does not imply that. If a 도서관 has more books than it's open-access hall can house, it would put the other books in a closed-access 서고, or as the dictionary put it, "a room where they store books."
So I would say the more general translation of "a library" would be 도서관, but 서고 may fit only given the right context.
answered 55 mins ago
TaegyungTaegyung
76513
76513
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