聲
- sound, voice, music, song;
Etymology
It is a compound ideograph, formed from:
殸 (seong), an abbreviated form of 磬 (gyeongsoe gyeong, “stone chime, lithophone”), representing the sound of striking a musical stone.
耳 (“ear”), indicating listening.
Thus, the character depicts “hearing the sound of a struck instrument.”
It can also be parsed as 聲 = 声 (instrument, sound) + 殳 (to strike) + 耳 (ear) → “to strike an instrument and hear it.”
Usage in Korean
聲 originated from the image of striking a lithophone and hearing the sound with the ear, and it developed into the primary word for human voice and vocal sounds. In classical philosophy it was distinguished from 音 (instrumental sound), and today it is a key morpheme for words about sound, speech, music, and reputation across East Asia.
음성 (音聲) – sound, voice
명성 (名聲) – fame, reputation
목소리 (聲) – voice (in Sino-Korean compounds)
합창성 (合唱聲) – choral sound
성악 (聲樂) – vocal music
잡성 (雜聲) – noise
Additional notes
Both 聲 and 音 mean “sound,” but they differ in nuance:
聲 refers to sounds produced by the human voice (speech, singing, tones).
音 refers more broadly to musical sounds, instrumental tones.
The Shuowen Jiezi (説文解字 shuōwén jiězì) distinguishes them by associating:
聲 with the five tones (五聲: 宮, 商, 角, 徴, 羽) – the vocal scale.
音 with the eight sounds (八音: 絲, 竹, 金, 石, 匏, 土, 革, 木) – categories of musical instruments.
In the Dao De Jing (도덕경), 聲 is used for the phonetic qualities of speech (phonology), while 音 refers to articulated sound shaped by the organs of speech (phonetics).
- 土水尸十 (GESJ)
- ⿱ 殸 耳