Months in Chinese, Japanese, and Korean

Chinese, Japanese, and Korean all appear to use the Sino character “月” (yuè) as their root word for the term ‘month’ as in months of the year. This character is originally a pictographic representation of a moon and is related in meaning to the moon or lunar cycle. Unlike many western calendars and time-tracking systems, Asia often based their time-keeping on the cycle of a moon as it changed through its phases. Consequently, one month for them would be the completion of one lunar cycle (which is around 29 days).

  1. MONTH
  2. CHINESE
  3. JAPANESE
  4. KOREAN

Although rooted in the same concept and character, each of the three languages pronounces the term differently and Korea uses Hangul which is a phonetic writing system rather than the ancient pictographs Kanji and Chinese are grounded in.

MONTH

Chinese


Yuè
(Yoo ə)

Moon
Originally ‘crescent shaped’ but shifted / added lines to avoid looking like other characters (口 ,日 )


Japanese


Gatsu
(gaht- s – short u)

Moon
Kanji uses the Sino character, but pronounced differently.

がつ
Gatsu
(gaht- s – short u)

Moon
Hiragana letters, still the same pronunciation as Kanji

月 is usually pronounced as がつ (Gatsu) when combined with other characters in a word. When standing alone, it is usually pronounced as げつ (Getsu)


Korean


Wol

Moon
Pronunciation is the older Korean reading of


All three languages appear to generally create the name of each month by combining the number with the term for month:

Number + Month


CHINESE

Emphasis in pronunciation is on the number, not the “yuè

ChineseRomanizedEnglish
一月 yuèJanuary
二月èr yuèFebruary
三月sān yuèMarch
四月 yuèApril
五月 yuèMay
六月liù yuèJune
七月yuèJuly
八月  yuèAugust
九月 jiǔ yuèSeptember
十月shí yuèOctober
十一月shí yī yuè
(10 + 1)
November
十二月 shí èr yuè
(10 + 2)
December

JAPANESE

Both Kanji and Hiragana use the template “Number + Month” and the pronunciation is the same. They just use different characters (月 for Kanji / がつ for Hiragana . . . both pronounced “gat-su”).

Emphasis in pronunciation is on the number, not the “gat-su”

It is helpful to note some of the Chinese pronunciation is similar in some of the numbers (e.g., the ‘chi’ in seven and ‘san’ is just the same in both languages).

Kanji1HiraganaRomanizedEnglish
一月いちがつichigatsuJanuary
二月にがつnigatsuFebruary
三月さんがつsangatsuMarch
四月しがつshigatsu2April
五月ごがつgogatsuMay
六月ろくがつrokugatsuJune
七月しちがつshichigatsu3July
八月 はちがつhachigatsuAugust
九月 くがつkugatsu4September
十月じゅうがつjuugatsuOctober
十一月じゅういちがつjuuichigatsu
(10 + 1)
November
十二月 じゅうにがつjuunigatsu
(10 + 2)
December
Fun note: Clearly “じゅ” is the Hiragana sound for “Juu” (Sort of a ‘j’ + ‘yuu’ sound)😊

KOREAN

Korea has two separate numbering systems, but uses the “Sino-Korean” in their months. Consequently, there is often a similar pronunciation between the Korean-Chinese or Korean-Japanese numbers here. For example, ‘go’ and ‘o’ for 5 and ‘san’ and ‘sam’ for 3.

Emphasis in pronunciation is on the number, not the “yuè

KoreanRomanizedEnglish
일월ilwolJanuary
이월iwolFebruary
삼월samwolMarch
사월sawolApril
오월owolMay
유월yuwol5June
칠월chilwolJuly
팔월 palwolAugust
구월 guwolSeptember
시월shiwolOctober
십일월shipilwol
(10 + 1)
November
십이월 shipiwol
(10 + 2)
December
😣I can’t hear the difference between ilwol and iwol on sample audio tracks . . . bah. Sounds like they are barely pronouncing the ‘l’ sound before ‘wol’ on several of them (chilwol, palwol, shipilwol).

  1. Although spelled differently, the Kanji and Hiragana appear to be pronounced the same way. ↩︎
  2. Uses “Shi” (Sino pronunciation of ‘Shi’), not “Yon” ↩︎
  3. Uses “Shichi” (Sino pronunciation of ‘qi’), not “Nana” ↩︎
  4. Uses “Ku” (Sino pronunciation of ‘ju’), not “Kyuu” ↩︎
  5. “유” (yu) instead of “육” (yuk) ↩︎


Disclaimer

This website is absolutely not a professional resource and is purely my own personal way of trying to learn various languages. If you see a mistake, by all means please let me know in the comments as long as you do so in a friendly way. ❤️

One response to “Months in Chinese, Japanese, and Korean”

  1. […] Period of TimeCombination of 其 (qí) and 月(yuè). 月, as discussed with months, refers to the moon and lunar calendar. 其 (qí) has several meanings including ‘a portion […]

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