壤
- soil;
- earth;
- cultivated land;
Etymology
A phono-semantic compound:
土 (earth, soil) — semantic component
襄 (to assist; to raise up) — phonetic component
The character originally referred to soft, workable soil, especially fertile earth suitable for cultivation, as opposed to rocky or barren ground.
Usage in Korean
In modern Korean, 壤 appears almost exclusively in 土壤 (토양).
토양 (土壤) — soil
사양 (沙壤) — sandy soil
비옥한 토양 (肥沃土壤) — fertile land
강토사양 (疆土壤) — territory and land
Additional notes
Unlike 地, 壤 emphasizes texture, fertility, and usability.
Usage and nuance:
If 天 (heaven) contrasts with 地 (earth) in a broad cosmological sense, then 霄 (the high sky) is often paired with 壤, emphasizing the soft, living earth below.
Thus, 壤 carries a more tactile, fertile, and human-centered sense of “earth” than 地, which can be abstract or geographic.
The large-number meaning (10²⁸) in the traditional Chinese large-number system is historical only and virtually never used today.
The character often appears in cosmological contrasts, especially in literary and philosophical texts.
Classical citations:
《屈原, 離騷》 (Qu Yuan, Li Sao)
「上至於天,下至於壤」
“Above, reaching heaven; below, touching the earth.”
壤 represents the lowest, most material realm, paired with lofty celestial imagery.
Words that derived from 壤
- 土卜口女 (GYRV)
- ⿰ 土 襄