• clumsy;
  • awkward;
  • unskillful;
  • inept;

Etymology

A phono-semantic compound consisting of:

(hand) — semantic component, suggests manual activity or skill;

— phonetic component, supplying the sound (졸 / zhuō).

The original idea likely referred to clumsy or unskilled manual action — work that does not “come out” smoothly — which later broadened to general incompetence or awkwardness.

Usage in Korean

졸렬 (拙劣) — crude; poor in quality

졸작 (拙作) — one’s humble work (self-deprecating expression)

옹졸 (壅拙) — narrow-minded; petty

Additional notes

Though originally related to manual skill, the meaning broadened to general inadequacy or modest self-reference.

In literary tradition, authors often use 拙 to modestly refer to their own work.

The philosophical contrast between (skillful) and 拙 (clumsy) appears frequently in Daoist texts.

Related characters:

— dull; slow

笨 — stupid; clumsy

— foolish

— inferior

拙 emphasizes lack of skill rather than lack of intelligence.

It often carries a tone of modesty when used reflexively.

Classical citations:

《老子》 (Lao Tzu)

「大巧若拙」

“Great skill appears clumsy.”

This famous phrase illustrates the philosophical nuance: true mastery may look simple or unpolished.

졸하다
jolhada
jol
Kangxi radical:64, + 5
Strokes:8
Unicode:U+62D9
Cangjie input:
  • 手山山 (QUU)
Composition:
  • ⿰ 扌 出

Neighboring characters in the dictionary

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