輛
- vehicle;
- carriage;
- cart;
- wagon;
Etymology
Phono-semantic compound consisting of:
車 (수레 거) — semantic component, meaning cart, vehicle, wheel, or transportation.
兩 (두 량) — phonetic component, providing the sound liàng / ryang and also implying the sense of duality, pair, or alignment.
According to Shuowen Jiezi (說文解字):
「輛,車數也。从車,兩聲。」
“輛 means the number of carts; composed of 車 (‘vehicle’) and phonetic 兩 (‘pair’).”
Originally, the character referred to two carts placed side by side — a pair of vehicles, or the unit by which carts were counted.
This semantic association of duality and movement made 輛 the standard measure word for vehicles in later Chinese usage.
Usage in Korean
車輛 (차량) — vehicles; means of transportation
一輛車 (일량차) — one vehicle; one car
輛次 (량차) — number of vehicles; order in a convoy
輛輛 (량량) — every vehicle; all carts (classical usage)
輛馬 (량마) — horse-drawn carriage (archaic)
輛隊 (량대) — convoy; line of vehicles
In modern East Asian languages, 輛 is primarily used as a numerative classifier for cars and wheeled transport:
Korea: 車輛 (차량) — vehicle(s)
China: 一輛汽車 (yī liàng qìchē) — one car
Japan: 車両 (sharyō) — railway car; train carriage
Words that derived from 輛
Additional notes
The choice of 兩 (two) as the phonetic element carries both sound and semantic resonance: ancient carriages were typically two-wheeled, drawn by a pair of horses.
Thus, the concept of two — the dual balance of left and right, wheel and axle — became symbolically tied to motion and balance in transport.
The bronze and seal script forms of 輛 depict the 車 element clearly, with 兩 beneath or beside it, showing the physical and conceptual link between vehicle and pairing.
Cultural and symbolic meaning:
Beyond its practical sense, 輛 carries symbolic undertones of balance, duality, and coordinated movement — the harmony of paired forces advancing together.
In classical literature, 輛 can metaphorically denote parallelism and balance — the coordinated motion of paired entities: two wheels of a chariot, two ministers of a state, or two complementary forces in harmony.
「君臣如兩輛之輪,相推而行。」
“The ruler and his minister are like the two wheels of a carriage — moving forward only through mutual support.”
This imagery reflects the Confucian ideal of harmony through cooperation — progress depending upon proper alignment and mutual function, as with wheels on a shared axle.
- 十十一中月 (JJMLB)
- ⿰ 車 兩