岳
- great mountain;
- high peak;
Etymology
Compound ideograph:
丘 (hill, mound) – representing raised land.
山 (mountain) – reinforcing the meaning of mountain.
Together they depict a grand, towering mountain.
Semantic range:
- great mountain, high peak;
- metaphorical: greatness, majesty, eminence;
- figurative: 岳父 (wife’s father) – father-in-law, by extension 岳母 (wife’s mother).
Usage in Korean
岳父 (악부) – father-in-law (wife’s father)
岳母 (악모) – mother-in-law (wife’s mother)
五岳 (오악) – the Five Great Mountains of China
北岳 (북악) – the Northern Peak
南岳 (남악) – the Southern Peak
Additional notes
岳 is also used in names of famous mountains (e.g., 泰山, one of the 五岳).
As a simplification of 嶽, it has become the standard form in modern Chinese, Japanese, and Korean.
In literary usage, 岳 can signify greatness or eminence in character as well as geography.
Alternative forms
嶽
- 人一山 (OMU)
- ⿱ 丘 山