• citron;
  • pomelo;
  • yuzu;

Etymology

A phono-semantic compound:

(tree) — semantic component, clearly marks it as a tree-borne fruit

(origin; from) — phonetic component, supplies the sound

Originally, 柚 referred broadly to a large citrus fruit growing on trees.

In ancient and classical Chinese usage, it most commonly denoted what is now called the pomelo (Citrus maxima).

Usage in Korean

In Korean usage, 柚 is strongly associated with yuzu, not pomelo.

柚子 (유자) — yuzu

Widely used in:

유자차 (yuzu tea)

유자청 (yuzu syrup)

유자향 (yuzu fragrance)

Additional notes

Semantic divergence by language:

Although yuzu and pomelo are different citrus fruits botanically, both belong to the same citrus lineage, and early East Asian classifications grouped them together.

As citrus cultivation diversified regionally:

- China preserved the pomelo meaning

- Korea and Japan specialized the character for yuzu

This is a classic example of semantic narrowing by region.

In Korea and Japan, 柚 carries strong seasonal and cultural associations, especially with winter.

In East Asian traditional medicine and cuisine, yuzu is valued for fragrance, preservation and warming properties.

Despite sharing the same character, 柚 does not mean the same fruit across languages, making it a notable case of Sinosphere semantic divergence.

유자
유, 축
유자
yu, chuk
Kangxi radical:75, + 5
Strokes:9
Unicode:U+67DA
Cangjie input:
  • 木中田 (DLW)
Composition:
  • ⿰ 木 由

Neighboring characters in the dictionary

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