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KOR

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KOR
NameKOR
Native nameKOR
CapitalSeoul
Largest citySeoul
Official languagesKorean
Area km2100000
Population estimate50000000
GovernmentRepublic
CurrencyWon

KOR KOR is a short, three-letter identifier appearing across languages, codes, organizations, and cultural works. It functions as an ISO trigram, an acronym, a toponymic shorthand, and a stylistic signifier in diverse contexts spanning Seoul, Tokyo, New York City, London. As an element of names and codes, it connects to international standards, sporting events, scientific nomenclature, and popular culture.

Etymology and meanings

The trigram KOR is used as the ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 code for the Republic of Korea, appearing alongside standards such as ISO 3166-2, ISO 4217 and in datasets from United Nations, World Bank, International Monetary Fund and World Health Organization. Linguistically, the sequence evokes the root of ethnonyms like Koreans and historical polities such as Goryeo and Joseon, paralleling romanizations like McCune–Reischauer and Revised Romanization of Korean. In international sport, KOR appears on entries in Olympic Games, FIFA World Cup, Asian Games, and in records held by International Olympic Committee and FIFA. As an acronym it parallels other nation trigrams like USA, GBR, FRA, CHN and shares registry contexts with codes used by International Air Transport Association and International Civil Aviation Organization.

History and cultural references

KOR as a code and shorthand features in historical documents, diplomatic correspondences, and media related to Korean War, Treaty of San Francisco (1951), Armistice Agreement negotiations at Panmunjom and interactions with entities like United States Department of State, People's Republic of China, Soviet Union, United Nations Command. Cultural references use KOR in film credits, exhibition catalogs, and festival programming at events such as Cannes Film Festival, Venice Film Festival, Busan International Film Festival, and publications from The New York Times, BBC, NHK, Yonhap News Agency. Museums and institutes including the National Museum of Korea, British Museum, Smithsonian Institution, and Louvre catalog items with country codes and provenance tags employing trigrams like KOR. In literature and scholarship, publishers such as Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press, Harvard University Press cite archival materials from repositories like National Archives (United States), The National Archives (UK), and Library of Congress that reference KOR-coded records.

Organizations and acronyms

KOR appears as an acronym for non-governmental organizations, committees, and corporate brands, used by entities interacting with multinational institutions like United Nations Development Programme, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, World Trade Organization and regional bodies such as ASEAN, European Union, African Union. It is used in corporate registries alongside firms listed on Korea Exchange and multinational conglomerates like Samsung, Hyundai, LG, SK Group in filings submitted to regulators including Financial Services Commission (South Korea), Securities and Exchange Commission (United States), Financial Conduct Authority. Political groups and coalitions reference KOR in campaign materials similar to how parties in United States Democratic Party, Conservative Party (UK), Liberal Democratic Party (Japan) use abbreviations. Academic consortia and research centers at institutions like Seoul National University, Korea University, Yonsei University, Harvard University employ transliterated identifiers that include KOR in grant proposals to National Research Foundation of Korea and European Research Council.

Science and technology uses

In bioinformatics and genomics datasets, KOR appears as a label for sample provenance in studies deposited at GenBank, European Nucleotide Archive, Protein Data Bank, and cited in journals like Nature, Science, Cell. In materials science and engineering, laboratories at KAIST, MIT, Stanford University and corporations such as Samsung Electronics use country-code metadata including KOR in patents filed with World Intellectual Property Organization and United States Patent and Trademark Office. In telecommunications and internet governance, KOR is used in routing, country-code top-level domain registration discussions near Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers and in datasets from International Telecommunication Union. Aviation and maritime registries reference KOR in traffic statistics at International Air Transport Association and International Maritime Organization and in navigation charts produced by United States National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency.

Media, entertainment, and sports

KOR serves on scoreboards, accreditation badges, and broadcast graphics during competitions organized by International Olympic Committee, FIFA, World Athletics, Union Cycliste Internationale, and in reporting by media outlets such as ESPN, Sky Sports, NHK World, Arirang TV. Film and television credits in databases like IMDb, Rotten Tomatoes and streaming platforms such as Netflix, Amazon Prime Video tag productions with country trigrams including KOR. Music chart entries from Billboard, Gaon Chart, Oricon and award ceremonies like Grammy Awards, Mnet Asian Music Awards list artists by national codes. Esports tournaments run by Riot Games, Valve Corporation, Blizzard Entertainment display KOR for teams and players from the peninsula.

Notable people and places named KOR

The trigram appears in institutional names, team names, and venue signage in cities such as Seoul, Busan, Incheon, Daegu, and in locations referenced in travel guides by Lonely Planet, Fodor's Travel, Michelin Guide. Athletes from Park Ji-sung, Son Heung-min, Kim Yuna, Park Tae-hwan, Chun In-gee compete under the code in tournaments like UEFA Champions League, Premier League, Olympic Games, Asian Games. Cultural figures including Bong Joon-ho, Bae Doona, PSY, BLACKPINK appear in press materials that denote nationality with the trigram. Business leaders at Lee Jae-yong, Chung Eui-sun, Koo Kwang-mo and diplomats such as those posted to United Nations Headquarters, Embassy of South Korea in Washington, D.C., Embassy of South Korea in London are associated with documentation using KOR identifiers. Category:Three-letter country codes