チゲ
Confidentchige
jjigae; Korean stew
katakana
Origin
- Source language
- Korean (ko)
- Source form
- 찌개 / jjigae
- Borrowing route
- 韓国語料理名 → 日本語の韓国料理語へ
- Semantic shift
- 鍋・煮込み料理 → 日本語で辛い韓国鍋のイメージへ
- First attested
- 1980
Story
찌개 (jjigae) is the Korean source form behind チゲ. Digital Daijisen labels チゲ as Korean and defines it as a Korean nabe dish made with seafood or meat, tofu, vegetables, kimchi, doenjang, or gochujang. Seisenban Nihon Kokugo Daijiten gives the romanized source as jji-gai, while Korean dictionaries write the standard form as 찌개. Wiktionary analyzes it as 찌- plus -개, not as a Chinese-character word.
The borrowing entered Japanese through Korean-restaurant vocabulary, especially after postwar Korean food businesses and the 2000s Korean Wave expanded menu words. Japanese menus list キムチチゲ, テンジャンチゲ, スンドゥブチゲ, and プデチゲ. Because Japanese 鍋 already means a pot dish, the common restaurant phrase チゲ鍋 repeats the "stew or pot dish" idea. The same menus often place チヂミ, ビビンバ, and ナムル nearby.
Modern Japanese often associates チゲ with a spicy red soup, but Korean jjigae is a broader stew category. Doenjang-jjigae is soybean-paste based, kimchi-jjigae uses kimchi, and budae-jjigae includes sausage or luncheon meat. English "jjigae" is closer to the Korean category than "hot pot," because a Japanese nabe is often cooked at the table for several people. Example: キムチチゲを頼みます.