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Pyeong

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Pyeong
Listing outside a Korean real-estate agency showing floorspace in square meters and pyeong
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinpíng
Wade–Gilesp'ing
Southern Min
Hokkien POJpêⁿ
pîⁿ
phêⁿ
phîⁿ
phiâⁿ
phêng
Tâi-lôpênn
Korean name
Hangul
Hanja
Transcriptions
Revised Romanizationpyeong
McCune–Reischauerp'yŏng
Japanese name
Kanji
Kanaつぼ
Transcriptions
Romanizationtsubo

A pyeong (abbreviation py) is a Korean unit of area and floorspace, equal to a square kan or 36 square Korean feet. The ping and tsubo are its equivalent Taiwanese and Japanese units, similarly based on a square bu (ja:步) or ken, equivalent to 36 square Chinese or Japanese feet.[1][2]

Current use

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Korea

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In Korea, the period of Japanese occupation produced a pyeong of 400/121 or 3.3058 m2. It is the standard traditional measure for real estate floorspace, with an average house reckoned as about 25 pyeong, a studio apartment as 8–12 py, and a garret as 1½ py. In South Korea, the unit has been officially banned since 1961 but with little effect prior to the criminalization of its commercial use effective 1 July 2007.[3] Informal use continues, however, including in the form of real estate use of unusual fractions of meters equivalent to unit amounts of pyeong. Real estate listings on major websites such as Daum show measurements in square meters with the pyeong equivalent.

Taiwan

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In Taiwan, the Taiwanese ping was introduced in the period of Taiwan under Japanese rule, which remains in fairly common use and is about 3.305 m2.

Japan

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In Japan, the usual measure of real estate floorspace is the tatami and the tsubo is reckoned as two tatami. The tatami varies by region but the modern standard is usually taken to be the Nagoya tatami of about 1.653 m2, producing a tsubo of 3.306 m2. It is sometimes reckoned as comprising 10 .

China

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In China, the metrication of traditional units would produce a ping of 4 m2, but it is almost unknown, with most real estate floorspace simply reckoned in square meters. The longer length of the Hong Kong foot produces a larger ping of almost 5 m2, but it is similarly uncommon.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Unit conversion chart". 28 December 2005. Archived from the original on 28 December 2005. Retrieved 25 August 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  2. ^ "ko:'평' : 네이버 국어사전". Krdic.naver.com. Retrieved 25 August 2017.
  3. ^ "Gov't to Crack Down on Those Referring to Land as 'Pyeong'", The Hankyoreh, Seoul: The Hankyoreh Media, 23 June 2007.