• internal organs;

“Organs of the body”, as in 五臟 (오장, “the five viscera” – heart, liver, spleen, lungs, and kidneys in traditional East Asian medicine).

Etymology

Phono-semantic compound:

(육, “meat, flesh”) – indicates the meaning (a body part);

(장, “to store, to conceal”) – provides the sound.

The use of (to store) also reflects the concept in traditional Chinese medicine that organs “store” vital energies and substances.

Usage in Korean

臟 appears in key medical and anatomical terms like 內臟 (내장, internal organs) and 五臟 (오장, the five viscera).

오장 (五臟) — the five vital organs

내장 (內臟) — internal organs

장기 (臟器) — organ

Additional notes

臟 specifically denotes vital internal structures, not the body as a whole.

Conceptual comparison:

臟 — internal organs (solid)

腑 — hollow organs

— flesh

— body

— blood

In traditional Chinese medicine, 臟 refers specifically to the five solid organs (五臟):

- heart ()

- liver ()

- spleen (脾)

- lungs ()

- kidneys ()

These are contrasted with 腑, the hollow organs (六腑).

Together they form the concept 臟腑, the foundation of traditional East Asian physiology.

오장
ojang
jang
Kangxi radical:130, + 18
Strokes:22
Unicode:U+81DF
Cangjie input:
  • 月廿戈尸 (BTIS)
  • 難月廿戈尸 (XBTIS)
Composition:
  • ⿰ 月 藏

Neighboring characters in the dictionary

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