葬
- to bury;
- to inter a corpse;
- to conduct funeral rites;
Etymology
Usage in Korean
葬禮 (장례) — funeral
葬事 (장사) — funeral affairs
葬地 (장지) — burial site
土葬 (토장) — earth burial
火葬 (화장) — cremation
埋葬 (매장) — to bury, inter
改葬 (개장) — to move a grave
安葬 (안장) — to lay a body to rest
風葬 (풍장) — sky burial / wind burial (cultural practice term)
Literary expressions:
葬送 (장송) — to send off the dead; funeral procession
葬身 (장신) — to die and be buried; sacrifice oneself
殯葬 (빈장) — pre-burial and burial rites
Words that derived from 葬
Additional notes
葬 emphasizes respectful covering, not “disposing.”
Confucian rites revolve around honoring the dead with proper concealment beneath earth.
In East Asian tradition, burial (葬) reflects:
filial piety (孝)
- social rank (through scale of rites)
- moral respect
- belief in proper resting of ancestors
Hence many related terms include 遷葬 (moving graves), 厚葬 (lavish burial), 薄葬 (simple burial).
葬 is inseparable from 禮 (ritual propriety).
In ritual texts, the phrase 喪葬 (상장) repeatedly appears to denote the full cycle of mourning and burial.
葬 vs. 葢 / 蓋:
- different semantics despite similar radical placement.
葬 specifically requires the presence of 死 or its graphic replacement in older forms.
Classical citations:
《論語·八佾》 (Analects)
「君子之於葬也,致其哀。」
“In funeral rites, the gentleman gives full expression to his grief” — emphasizes ritual propriety.
《禮記·檀弓上》 (Book of Rites)
「葬者,藏也。」
“To bury (葬) means to conceal (to lay to rest)” — interprets burial as respectful concealment.
《史記·殷本紀》 (Records of the Grand Historian)
「以厚葬為孝。」
“They considered lavish burials as an act of filial piety.”
《周禮·春官》 (Rites of Zhou)
「掌其葬禮。」
“[The officer] oversees the rites of burial.”
- 廿一心廿 (TMPT)
- ⿳ 艹 死 廾