-으시-

Etymology
Likely, and it is suggested that it may have come from exiled scholars and government officials from the mainland. Ultimately from.

Usage notes
This ending is noted by multiple authors as a recent usage in the Jeju language, as it traditionally does have a complex system of subject honorifics like Korean does.

Etymology
From, from.

Usage notes

 * Honoring may be considered a broad or confusing term, but it indicates that the speaker is implying that the subject (or the possessor of the subject) is above their social status level; this can include people from parents and siblings to chiefs of companies, professionals like doctors, and the president. It can also be used sarcastically, such as when joking with a close friend.
 * Within the more older generation, the honorific suffix can be seen used to honor the weather such as, this is becoming less and less common though.
 * Traditionally, when a third person is honored, the speaker is implying that the addressee is also below the social status of the third person. As a result, this can come across as rude to the listener if the listener is not actually of such lower status. This use of the honorific is called . However, this principle is increasingly less used among younger speakers, who might instead often consider it impolite to not honor the third person.
 * In the colloquial language, is also used to honor the addressee in a conversation to a level greater than that allowed by the  suffix alone. Despite the fact that this is attested since as early as Middle Korean, this form is still generally considered prescriptively wrong, although it remains widespread and may eventually be accepted as standard.
 * As the suffix begins with, it causes the root to elide:  from.
 * Some verbs have special forms of honorifics that use a different root. These verbs include:, , , etc...