• light, radiance, brilliance;

Etymology

Pictograph: In oracle bone script, depicts a person kneeling and holding a torch or firebrand aloft, symbolizing the act of giving light.

Later stylized into the modern form, where the upper element suggests flame and the lower part a person or body.

Originally meant visible light or radiance, then extended to metaphorical senses like glory, honor, brilliance.

Semantic range:

- literal: light, brightness, illumination;

- metaphorical: glory, honor, brilliance, reputation;

- grammatical (Classical Chinese): resultative complement meaning completely, entirely (e.g., “吃光” = to eat up, consume all).

Usage in Korean

光明 (광명) — bright light, enlightenment

栄光 (영광) — glory, honor

光復 (광복) — restoration of light, national liberation

光輝 (광휘) — radiance, splendor

日光 (일광) — sunlight

光年 (광년) — light-year

光榮 (광영) — glory, honor

Additional notes

In Buddhist texts, 光 often symbolizes wisdom and enlightenment, the radiance of the Buddha’s compassion.

In Confucian and Daoist literature, it can denote the brilliance of virtue or the light of moral clarity.

In modern Korean history, 光 is notably associated with “광복 (光復)” — the recovery of national independence in 1945, literally “restoration of light.”

bit
gwang
Kangxi radical:10, + 4
Strokes:6
Unicode:U+5149
Cangjie input:
  • 火一山 (FMU)
Composition:
  • ⿱ ⺌ 兀

Characters next to each other in the list

References