沈
- to sink;
- to submerge;
- to go down;
Etymology
Early pictographic stage (甲骨文, Oracle Bone Script).
Originally a hieroglyphic/ideogrammatic character, depicting water (水) with a sacrificial object (羊 “sheep,” 牛 “ox,” or 玉 “jade”) being dropped into the water.
This represents the act of immersing / submerging offerings into water during rituals.
Thus, original meaning “to sink / to submerge”.
Later transformation to a phono-semantic compound:
沈 = 水 (water, semantic) + 冘 (yín / yóu, phonetic element)
冘 contributes the sound and partially the notion of moving downward / drifting.
Usage in Korean
Submersion / sinking:
沈沒 (침몰) — sinking (of ships); submersion
沈淪 (침륜) — to fall into ruin; moral decline
沈積 (침적) — sedimentation; deposit buildup
沈降 (침강) — subsidence; settling
Psychological / emotional:
沈思 (침사) — deep contemplation
沈痛 (침통) — grief, deep sorrow
Surname:
沈氏 (심씨) — the Sim family name
Etymological note:
Korean “김치, 김장”의 ‘김’ derived from 沈菜 (침채 → dimchae → gimchi) through phonological evolution.
Additional notes
The association of 沈 with ritual submersion of offerings explains why it appears in sacrificial contexts in ancient literature.
Relation to other characters:
沁 (to soak), 汁 (juice) share semantic domains.
沈 historically carried a rare meaning referring to “juice/extract,” though this is lost in modern usage.
Classical citations:
《左傳·襄公二十五年》 (Zuo Zhuan)
「水則載舟,亦能覆舟,沉之速也。」
“Water carries boats but can also overturn them—submerging them swiftly.”
沈 = to submerge, sink.
《淮南子·主術訓》 (Huainanzi)
「志沈則氣平。」
“When the mind sinks to stillness, the vital energy becomes calm.”
沈 = to sink inward; to become still (metaphorical).
《漢書·郊祀志》 (Book of Han)
「以玉沈於江。」
“Jade was submerged into the river as an offering.”
Reflects the ancient sacrificial origin of the character.
Alternative forms
沉 — interchangeable in meaning “to sink”
瀋 — distinct character; surname
In meaning “to sink,” 沉 is overwhelmingly used in China.
In Korean and Japanese, 沈 is the default form for both meanings.
- 水中月山 (ELBU)
- ⿰ 氵 冘