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ISO/TR 11941

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Fish bowl (talk | contribs) at 22:01, 26 January 2020 (this is not that similar to yale romanization; rather, it is obviously a modified form of rr). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

ISO/TR 11941:1996 is a Korean romanization system used in ISO. It is not commonly used. One example of its use is in Unicode character names. The standard was withdrawn in December 2013.

It appears to be modelled on the Revised Romanization, cf. the vowels.

Transcription rules

Consonants

k/g kk/gg ks/gs kh/k lk/lg
t/d tt/dd th/t lth/lt
p/b pp/bb ps/bs ph/p lp/lb lph/lp
c/j cc/jj ch/c nc/nj
s ss ls
m lm
–, ng h lh nh
r/l n

Vowels

a ae ya yae wa wae
eo e yeo ye weo we
o oe yo
u yu
eu
i yi wi

Usage

This system is used in Unicode character names. For example, the character ᄎ (U+110E) is named "HANGUL CHOSEONG CHIEUCH" (한글 초성 치읓); ㅊ is romanized as "ch." However, the character 차 (U+CC28) is named "HANGUL SYLLABLE CA"; ㅊ is romanized as "c."