Asadal, () was the capital city of the kingdom of Gojoseon (), the first kingdom and notably founded by the legendary king Dangun. It is thought that Asadal was located in Manchuria, in the northeastern Hwanghae Province in North Korea, or in the Pyongyang Province (, with no relation to Pyongyang).
However, the character , which is used in modern Chinese languages mainly to represent the or in word-final and preconsonantal positions when transcribing foreign words, has always had a sibilant () rather than an affricate like the Korean (), and there are plenty of other characters better suited to transcribing the Korean sound. The second part, dal, might be the result of reading Chinese characters in the Korean way; if so, the original Chinese pronunciation at the time Asadal was recorded in historical texts could have been Asada, with the final syllable ( -da) as a transcription of the Middle Korean word ᄯᅡᇂ〮 ( stáh), Early Modern Korean ᄯᅡ ( sta), Modern Korean 따 ( tta) or 땅 ( ttang), meaning "land." In this case, Asadal would mean "Morning Land." If, however, the final syllable was used much like the Goryeo city-name suffix -dal (used for mountains or cities founded on plateaus/mountains), then Asadal would mean "Morning Mountain."
It also draws possible connections to the Japanese word "" meaning "morning (朝)". The modern Korean language word for morning "Achim" () is thought to have evolved from Middle Korean "Achom (아ᄎᆞᆷ〮)." Using Japanese Asa as a cognate, alongside the aforementioned theories, it can be deduced that "Asadal" most likely meant "Morning Land" or "Morning Mountain". In fact, up until the Yamato Kingdom changed its name from "Wakoku (倭国)" to "Nihon (日本)", Ancient Korean kingdoms such as Baekje had used the same characters "日本", literally meaning "Land where the sun rises" (no relations to Japan) when it colloquially addressed itself, seeming to have carried over the meaning of "Morning Land" from Asadal.
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