• cancer;
  • malignant tumor;

A disease characterized by abnormal cell growth forming malignant masses.

Etymology

Compound of meaning and sound elements:

疒 (녁, “sickness”) — semantic, indicating disease.

嵒 (암, variant of 岩 “rock”) — phonetic, derived from 岩 (rock, cliff).

The form combines the “sickness” radical with a phonetic element signifying “rock,” reflecting the traditional medical perception of a hard mass inside the body resembling a stone.

Thus, 癌 literally conveys the idea of a rock-like tumor.

Usage in Korean

암 (癌) — general term for cancer

위암 (胃癌) — stomach cancer

폐암 (肺癌) — lung cancer

간암 (肝癌) — liver cancer

유방암 (乳房癌) — breast cancer

혈암 (血癌) — leukemia (lit. “blood cancer,” colloquial)

Words that derived from

Additional notes

In traditional Chinese medicine, hardened lumps or internal swellings were metaphorically called “rocks” (岩) within the body.

The character 癌 arose by combining 嵒 (a variant of 岩) with 疒 to clarify the pathological sense.

It appeared sporadically in medical writings of late imperial China, then became standardized in the modern era to denote malignant tumors.

am
am
Kangxi radical:104, + 12
Strokes:17
Unicode:U+764C
Cangjie input:
  • 大口口山 (KRRU)
Composition:
  • ⿸ 疒 嵒

Neighboring characters in the dictionary

References

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