樸
- simple;
- plain;
- unadorned;
Note: Korean distinguishes 樸 (박, “simple; plain; log”) from 朴 (박, a common surname, also “simple/plain”).
Etymology
Phono-semantic compound:
木 (“tree, wood”) — semantic component
菐 (pú / bó) — phonetic component, giving the pronunciation 박
Originally it meant raw, unprocessed wood, then by metaphor extended to simple, honest, unadorned human character.
朴 is an abbreviated historical form that became standard in China and Japan.
Usage in Korean
Character / moral qualities:
순박(淳樸) — simple, honest, pure-hearted
질박(質樸) — rustic, unpretentious
박진(樸眞) — genuine, plain, true
Literal wood meaning:
통박(通樸) — unprocessed wood; a log (rare, older usage)
박목(樸木) — raw timber
Idiomatic / metaphorical:
소박(素樸) — plain, natural
박수(樸守) — simplicity and purity
Additional notes
樸 is a central philosophical term in Daoism, referring to “the uncarved block” representing original, undivided simplicity. Along with 素 (“plainness”), 樸 represents a virtue of minimalism and natural authenticity.
The character is visually and semantically associated with raw wood and unrefined natural states, an important concept in classical Chinese thought.
Japanese standardizes 朴 (ぼく / ほう / えのき). 樸 survives only in classical texts, not in everyday writing.
Classical citations:
《論語·學而》 (The Analects)
「里仁爲美。擇不處仁,焉得知?樸。」(variant context)
Common value: 樸 refers to plainness and simplicity.
《老子》 (Lao Tzu)
「見素抱樸,少私寡欲。」
“Reveal your pure nature and embrace simplicity; lessen selfishness and reduce desire.”
《莊子·天地》 (Zhuangzi)
「樸散則爲器。」
“When the uncarved block is broken, it becomes tools (i.e., distinctions arise).”
《廣雅》 (Guangya)
「樸,木也。」
“樸 means wood.”
Here specifically, a log; raw timber.
- 木廿金人 (DTCO)
- ⿰ 木 菐