Chinese to Korean Translation

ZH KO Instant results API available

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How to Translate Chinese to Korean

1
Enter Your Text

Type or paste your Chinese text into the input box above. You can enter up to 10,000 characters, or upload a document file.

2
Click Translate

Click the Translate button or simply wait - auto-translation kicks in after you stop typing. The AI processes your text in milliseconds.

3
Copy Your Translation

Your Korean translation appears instantly. Click the copy button to copy it to your clipboard, or integrate via our API.

Common Chinese Phrases

Click any phrase to translate it instantly.

Instant Translation

Get Chinese to Korean translations in milliseconds.

Document Support

Upload Word, PDF, SRT subtitles and more for batch translation.

API Access

Integrate this translation pair into your apps with our REST API.

Chinese to Korean API

Add this translation pair to your application with a simple API call.

View API Docs Get API Key
curl -X POST https://api.translateapi.ai/api/v1/translate/ \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer YOUR_API_KEY" \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{"text": "Hello", "source_language": "zh", "target_language": "ko"}'

About Chinese to Korean Translation

TranslateAPI provides fast and accurate Chinese to Korean translation powered by advanced AI. Our service supports:

  • Text Translation - Translate any text up to 10,000 characters instantly
  • Document Translation - Upload Word, PDF, and text files for translation
  • API Integration - Add Chinese to Korean translation to your apps
  • Batch Translation - Translate multiple texts in a single request
Use Cases:
  • Translate Chinese documents to Korean for business
  • Localize websites and apps from Chinese to Korean
  • Convert Chinese subtitles to Korean
  • Communicate with Korean speakers
Translation Pair
Source
Chinese (zh)
Target
Korean (ko)

Frequently Asked Questions

CJK ↔ CJK translation (Chinese ↔ Japanese ↔ Korean) is one of the strongest areas in modern neural machine translation because the three languages share a large vocabulary of Sino-loanwords. Expect 92-95% professional-grade accuracy for Chinese to Korean, with the largest residual errors in idiomatic or culturally-specific phrasing.

Yes — Japanese kango (Sino-Japanese), Korean Hanja-origin words, and Chinese hanzi often share a written form. The model exploits this by aligning Sino-loanwords across the pair, which is why CJK ↔ CJK quality often beats CJK ↔ English on technical content.

Output script follows the standard convention for the target: simplified Chinese for zh (use zh-TW for traditional), modern Japanese mixed-script for ja, pure Hangul for ko (Hanja is added only when context requires it). Override via the explicit target code if you need a different convention.

Ateji (kanji used phonetically rather than for meaning) are translated to the closest semantic equivalent in Korean, not transliterated. Hanja in Korean source text are read by their Korean pronunciation before translation.

All three CJK languages have rich honorific systems but they don't align one-to-one. Korean has the deepest distinction (반말, 해요체, 합니다체); Japanese splits into desu/masu plain, sonkeigo (elevated), and kenjōgo (humble); Mandarin Chinese encodes politeness mostly through word choice rather than verb morphology. The model picks a sensible default per target; for matched levels, hint in the source.

East Asian personal names use Last-First order and stay in that order through CJK ↔ CJK translation. Hanzi / kanji names are converted to the target language's reading (e.g. Chinese 王偉 → Japanese 王偉 with the on-yomi reading "Ō I"; Korean reading via the Sino-Korean equivalent). Western names stay in their romanized form.

Place names use the local-standard spelling: Tokyo as 東京 in Japanese, 도쿄 in Korean, 东京 in simplified Chinese. The model knows the alignment table so cross-script place names stay recognizable.

All three CJK languages have a classical register (wenyan for Chinese, bungo for Japanese, hanmun for Korean) used in poetry, legal text, and historical context. The model translates classical source text by first rendering modern paraphrase, then applying the target's classical conventions where appropriate.

No spaces in Chinese or Japanese source text means the model must segment internally. Modern subword tokenizers (BPE / SentencePiece) handle this without an explicit segmentation pass. Korean uses spaces but with looser conventions than English; the model normalizes spacing on the output side.

✓ ✗ 〇 × 三 ★ ⭐ — common East-Asian symbol marks (especially 〇 / × for yes/no on forms) are preserved across Chinese and Korean. Standard Unicode emojis pass through unchanged.

Yes — Chinese, Japanese, and Korean conventionally use full-width punctuation (。 , 、 「」 『』 ()). The output for any CJK target uses full-width forms, switching to half-width inside Latin / Western quoted strings.

For CJK ↔ CJK, paragraph-level chunks (500-1500 characters) get the best discourse-level quality because the model preserves cross-sentence references and topic-comment structure within a chunk. The hard limit is 10,000 characters per web request, 50,000 per API call.

Other Translation Options

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Reverse Translation

Translate from Korean to Chinese

Korean → Chinese
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