• slave;
  • servant;
  • bondman;

Etymology

Ideogrammatic compound consisting of:

(계집 녀) — woman; here symbolizing subordination or servitude within early patriarchal societies.

(또 우) — hand; representing command or control.

Shuowen Jiezi (說文解字):

「奴,臣妾也。从女,从又。」

“奴 means a servant or bondperson. Formed from (‘woman’) and (‘hand’).”

In the earliest bronze and oracle forms, the right component was drawn as an outstretched hand, suggesting an act of ordering or commanding.

Thus, the composite originally depicted a woman under another’s direction or control — one who serves at another’s command.

The symbol later generalized beyond gender, coming to mean any servant, slave, or subject person, and eventually a man of low station.

Usage in Korean

奴隷 (노예) — slave, servant

臣奴 (신노) — subject or servile official

婢奴 (비노) — male and female slaves (collectively)

奴僕 (노복) — servant, retainer

家奴 (가노) — household slave

官奴 (관노) — government-owned slave (historical term in Korea)

農奴 (농노) — serf, peasant bound to land

走奴 (주노) — runaway slave

奴婢 (노비) — slave class (men and women)

In literary and colloquial use:

奴才 (노재) — “this servant,” a humble self-reference before superiors.

家奴、僕奴 — servant in private household.

奴等 (노등) — “we slaves,” used as deferential plural.

In pejorative extension, 奴 came to denote any despicable or base person, reflected in words like 놈, 녀석 in Korean, descended semantically from this concept.

Words that derived from

Additional notes

The institution of 奴 (slavery) in early Chinese society dates back to the Shang () and Zhou () dynasties, where captives of war and criminals were enslaved.

Over time, 奴 became a general social designation for bondservants and domestic slaves, often paired with 婢 (female servant) as 奴婢.

During the Han and Tang dynasties, 奴婢 were household property — both laborers and symbols of wealth.

By the Tang period, 奴 could also denote an underling or flunky, carrying strong social stigma.

In Korean historical society (고려·조선), 노비 (奴婢) referred to hereditary slaves, forming a distinct social class until their abolition in the late 19th century.

Cultural and linguistic notes:

Because 奴 implies inferiority or subservience, it rarely appears in personal or place names.

However, in religious or devotional contexts, it was used honorifically, expressing utter devotion to a sacred being, much like “servant of God” in Abrahamic contexts.

For example:

文殊奴 (문수노) — “servant of Manjusri”

牟尼奴 (모니노) — “servant of the Sage (Śākyamuni)”

三寶奴 (삼보노) — “servant of the Three Jewels (Buddha, Dharma, Sangha)”

These Buddhist names use 奴 to signify humble submission and spiritual servitude — the one who dedicates body and soul to the Dharma.

Cultural and symbolic interpretation:

While its literal sense denotes subjugation, the moral reinterpretation of 奴 in later religious and literary texts often transformed servitude into a symbol of loyalty, humility, and faithfulness.

「願為佛奴,終不為王。」

“I would rather be the Buddha’s servant than a worldly king.”

Thus, 奴 embodies both the lowest human condition and the highest spiritual surrender — a word bridging suffering and devotion, bondage and faith.

Linguistic notes:

In phonetic and graphic history, 奴 influenced several sound-series characters (, , 弩, etc.), giving the no / nu sound base in Sino-Xenic readings.

It also influenced Japanese kana ぬ / ヌ (nu), both derived historically from 奴’s cursive (sōsho) form — showing the deep cultural transmission from Chinese character script to Japanese syllabary.

Derived characters

(힘쓸 노) — adds (strength) to 奴 → “to exert effort.”

(성낼 노) — adds (heart) to 奴 → “to become angry,” symbolizing “enslaved heart” or “emotion under constraint.”

These derivatives reflect semantic shifts from external subjugation (奴) to internal struggle () or self-discipline ().

jong
no
Kangxi radical:38, + 2
Strokes:5
Unicode:U+5974
Cangjie input:
  • 女水 (VE)
Composition:
  • ⿰ 女 又

Neighboring characters in the dictionary

References

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