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== Related terms ==
== Related terms ==


Though not as popular, there are also several other commonly used Korean words for describing gamers with various skill levels. ''Joongsu'' ([[hangul]]: 중수, [[hanja]]: 中手, literally "middle hand") stands for "a moderately good player", ''hasu'' ([[hangul]]: 하수, [[hanja]]: 下手, literally "low hand") for "a poor player" or "a person with no skill" and ''[[chobo]]'' ([[hangul]]: 초보, [[hanja]]: 初步, literally "first step") for "a novice player". Hasu and chobo are the same skill level, but hasu is disrespectful or derogatory (whereas chobo is not). The English equivalent to hasu would be "[[newbie]]" or "scrub" and chobo would be "beginner".
Though not as popular, there are also several other commonly used Korean words for describing gamers with various skill levels. ''Jungsu'' ([[hangul]]: 중수, [[hanja]]: 中手, literally "middle hand") stands for "a moderately good player", ''hasu'' ([[hangul]]: 하수, [[hanja]]: 下手, literally "low hand") for "a poor player" or "a person with no skill" and ''[[chobo]]'' ([[hangul]]: 초보, [[hanja]]: 初步, literally "first step") for "a novice player". Hasu and chobo are the same skill level, but hasu is disrespectful or derogatory (whereas chobo is not). The English equivalent to hasu would be "[[newbie]]" or "scrub" and chobo would be "beginner".


== Synonyms ==
== Synonyms ==

Revision as of 03:07, 17 September 2020

Gosu
Hangul
Hanja
Revised RomanizationGosu
McCune–ReischauerKosu

Gosu (고수) is a Korean term used to refer to a highly skilled person. In computer gaming the term is usually used to refer to a person who dominated games like StarCraft, Counter-Strike, Tekken, Warcraft III, Diablo II, DotA, League of Legends, Heroes of the Storm, Overwatch, Dishonored II and others. The term was adopted by gaming communities in many countries because of a large South Korean presence in online gaming communities.[1]

Origin

The term is Sino-Korean vocabulary, and cognates in other East Asian languages that feature the same hanja (, literally "high hand") include gāoshǒu (Mandarin, "expert; ace; master"), ko-chhiú (Taiwanese, same meaning as in Mandarin) and cao thủ (Vietnamese, "skilled person; master"). In the dialect of the Gyeongnam province, gosu also has the meaning of "leader".[2] Figuratively meaning pro or highly skilled at something, gosu's pre-computing usage usually referred to martial arts or the game of go.[3]

Though not as popular, there are also several other commonly used Korean words for describing gamers with various skill levels. Jungsu (hangul: 중수, hanja: 中手, literally "middle hand") stands for "a moderately good player", hasu (hangul: 하수, hanja: 下手, literally "low hand") for "a poor player" or "a person with no skill" and chobo (hangul: 초보, hanja: 初步, literally "first step") for "a novice player". Hasu and chobo are the same skill level, but hasu is disrespectful or derogatory (whereas chobo is not). The English equivalent to hasu would be "newbie" or "scrub" and chobo would be "beginner".

Synonyms

See also

References

  1. ^ "BBC NEWS - Asia-Pacific - South Korea's gaming addicts". Retrieved 22 December 2016.
  2. ^ "'고수' : 네이버 국어사전". Retrieved 22 December 2016.
  3. ^ "'고수' : 네이버 국어사전". Retrieved 22 December 2016.