篇
- book, chapter, section;
Etymology
Formed as a phono-semantic compound:
竹 (대 죽) — “bamboo,” indicating the material used for early books (bamboo slips); semantic component.
扁 (넓을 편 / 평평할 편) — “flat, wide,” serving as the phonetic component and also reinforcing the idea of flat, arranged bamboo slips.
Thus, 篇 literally evokes the image of bamboo slips bound flat together to form a scroll or chapter, reflecting the earliest form of writing material before paper.
Usage in Korean
시편 (詩篇) — a poem; a collection of poems
서편 (書篇) — a writing; literary work
편장 (篇章) — composition; literary structure
편수 (篇數) — number of writings or volumes
In literary and academic contexts, 편(篇) functions both as a noun (“chapter” or “essay”) and as a counting unit for literary works, similar to “-piece” in English.
Words that derived from 篇
Additional notes
In antiquity, writings were recorded on bamboo slips (竹簡), which were tied into bundles — each bundle representing one 篇 (scroll or chapter).
Thus, 篇 symbolizes the organization of thought into coherent, material form — the transformation of fleeting words into a lasting record.
In classical literature, 篇 often conveys reverence for the written word, as in 一篇好文 — “a fine piece of writing.”
Later, by analogy, 篇 came to denote poems, essays, or compositions, and in modern scholarship it serves as a neutral counting word for texts and papers, linking the heritage of bamboo scrolls with the written page.
- 竹竹尸月 (HHSB)
- 竹戈尸月 (HISB)
- ⿱ 𥫗 扁