核
- seed, kernel, core, nucleus;
Etymology
Phono-semantic compound composed of:
木 (mù) — “tree, wood,” indicating relation to plants or fruit.
亥 (hài) — providing sound and suggesting something enclosed or contained.
Originally, the character depicted the woody center or pit of fruit — the solid inner part around which life or growth revolves.
This sense naturally extended to denote the central core of things, whether physical or conceptual.
Usage in Korean
In modern Chinese and Korean, 核 is heavily used in scientific and technical terms:
Physics: 原子核 (atomic nucleus), 核反應 (nuclear reaction).
Biology: 細胞核 (cell nucleus), 核酸 (nucleic acid).
Politics: 核武器 (nuclear weapons), 核抑止力 (nuclear deterrence).
Its symbolic meaning of “center and power” connects well with the original notion of a “seed” that holds potential and energy.
核心 (핵심) — core, essence, nucleus
原子核 (원자핵) — atomic nucleus
核能 (핵능) — nuclear energy
核武器 (핵무기) — nuclear weapon
核酸 (핵산) — nucleic acid (biology)
核桃 (호도 / 핵도) — walnut (literally “seed peach”)
核查 (핵찰) — verification, inspection
核准 (핵준) — approval, ratification
核對 (핵대) — cross-check, verification
Words that derived from 核
Additional notes
Cultural & linguistic notes:
In classical Chinese, 核 and 覈 were often interchangeable, both carrying senses of “to examine” and “to verify.”
In modern simplified Chinese, 核 officially replaced 覈.
e.g., 核實 (to verify) = 覈實 in traditional form.
In Korean and Japanese, the semantic range narrowed to “core, nucleus, kernel.”
Example idioms & phrases:
核心人物 — “core person” — key figure, central person.
抓住問題的核心 — “grasp the problem’s core” — focus on the essence of the issue.
核爆 — "nuclear explosion" — refers to atomic detonation.
核時代 — "nuclear age" — modern technological era defined by nuclear power.
- 木卜女人 (DYVO)
- ⿰ 木 亥