• to freeze;
  • to be cold;

Etymology

A phono-semantic compound made from:

(빙, “ice” radical) - conveys the meaning “ice, coldness”;

(동, “east”) - provides the sound.

The earliest meaning of 凍 is literal — "water solidifying due to cold."

From this, meanings expanded naturally to:

- bodily numbness from cold

- emotional or social rigidity

- suspension or immobilization

Usage in Korean

동결 (凍結) — freezing; freeze (also figurative: asset freeze)

냉동 (冷凍) — refrigeration; freezing

해동 (解凍) — thawing

동사 (凍死) — death by freezing

동상 (凍傷) — frostbite

Words that derived from

Additional notes

Related characters:

冰 / — ice

— cold

— cool; cold

涼 / 凉 — cool

— to bind; (combined as 凍結 “freeze solid”)

In Classical Chinese, 凍 frequently appears in descriptions of:

- winter conditions

- bodily suffering from cold

- frozen rivers and lands

Such usage is common in historical prose and poetry describing harsh winters.

In philosophical context cold and freezing are often metaphors for:

- stagnation

- suffering

- deprivation

In Buddhist texts, extreme cold (寒凍) is sometimes contrasted with the “heat” of desire or passion.

eol
dong
Kangxi radical:15, + 8
Strokes:10
Unicode:U+51CD
Cangjie input:
  • 戈一木田 (IMDW)
Composition:
  • ⿰ 冫 東

Neighboring characters in the dictionary

References

Creative commons license
The content on this page provided under the CC BY-NC-SA license.