斥
- to repel, drive away, reject, denounce;
Etymology
Originally a phono-semantic compound.
Old form: 㡿 (廣 + 屰)
廣 (집 엄) — semantic component, meaning “expanse, broad area,” referring to an open or extended space.
屰 (거스를 역) — phonetic component, providing sound chi̯ek and connoting opposition or reversal.
Later, the graphic form evolved:
㡿 → 厈 → 斥.
In the clerical (隸書) and regular (楷書) scripts, the upper element simplified into 斤 (도끼 근)-like strokes, though it is unrelated to the axe in meaning.
The small dot on the right originally represented the phonetic portion derived from 屰.
Thus, 斥 originally meant “to push away toward an open area,” then came to mean “to repel, to reject.”
In Shuowen Jiezi (說文解字):
「斥,水之濱也。从斤,尺聲。」
“斥 means the shore of water; composed of 斤 with the sound of 尺.”
The text interprets the character as related to boundaries and edges—later extended to social or moral repulsion.
Semantic evolution:
Topographic (original): coastal boundary, flat shore.
Physical action: to push back, drive away.
Moral / rhetorical: to reject or condemn.
Abstract: to repulse, exclude, oppose.
This progression parallels many movement verbs in Chinese that extended from physical to social meaning.
Usage in Korean
斥和 (척화) — reject peace; resist compromise (used in Joseon history)
排斥 (배척) — to exclude, ostracize
斥候 (척후) — scout, reconnaissance (literally “to look out”)
斥責 (척책) — to reproach, scold severely
斥退 (척퇴) — to dismiss or expel
斥力 (척력) — repulsive force (in physics)
斥地 (척지) — water edge, riverbank (ancient sense)
Words that derived from 斥
Additional notes
Book of Documents (書經 · 大禹謨):
「斥山浚川。」
“He pushed back the mountains and dredged the rivers” — Here, 斥 conveys the sense “to clear away or open out.”
Its meanings broadened from the physical “to drive away” to moral and rhetorical “to reject, condemn, or expel.”
Zuo Zhuan (左傳 · 僖公二十四年):
「君子不斥言。」
“A gentleman does not reject words (without consideration)” — used morally, meaning “to reject or dismiss harshly.”
Han Feizi (韓非子 · 難一):
「斥其所惡,而納其所好。」
“He rejects what he hates and accepts what he loves.”
In both classical and modern usage, 斥 embodies the idea of resisting intrusion, drawing clear boundaries, and upholding distinction — whether in geography, ethics, or speech.
- 竹一卜 (HMY)
- ⿸ 斤 丶
- ⿸ 𠂋 卜