芽
- bud;
- shoot;
- sprout;
Etymology
A phono-semantic compound:
艸 (“grass, plant”) — semantic element, indicating plants.
牙 (a / yá, “tooth, tusk”) — phonetic element.
Original meaning: new shoots or sprouts breaking through the soil (likened to a tooth emerging).
Usage in Korean
Widely used in modern Chinese, Korean, and Japanese with the literal sense “bud/sprout.”
發芽 (발아) — germination, to sprout
芽生 (아생) — budding, sprouting
豆芽 (두아 / 콩나물) — bean sprout
茶芽 (차아) — tea buds (young tea leaves)
花芽 (화아) — flower bud
Additional notes
The metaphor compares a plant shoot breaking through the ground to a tooth emerging through gums.
In East Asian literature, 芽 often symbolizes new beginnings, youth, and vitality.
芽
Nativerom:
아
Sino: 아
a
Kangxi radical:140, 艸 + 4
Strokes:7
Unicode:U+82BD
Cangjie input:
- 廿一女竹 (TMVH)
Composition:
- ⿱ 艹 牙