• membrane;
  • thin film;
  • layer;

Etymology

A phono-semantic compound:

(육, “meat, flesh”) - provides the meaning (relating to the body or organic matter);

(막, “none, dark”) - provides the sound.

The flesh radical indicates a bodily or organic substance, while provides the sound and originally conveyed a sense of diffuse covering, reinforcing the idea of a thin layer spread over something.

The earliest meaning of 膜 was "a thin layer covering organs or tissues." It referred specifically to biological membranes, such as those surrounding organs or forming bodily partitions.

Usage in Korean

黏膜 (점막) — mucous membrane

角膜 (각막) — cornea

鼓膜 (고막) — eardrum

筋膜 (근막) — fascia

망막 (網膜) — retina

膜組織 (막조직) — membranous tissue

Words that derived from

Additional notes

膜 is neutral and technical, lacking the moral weight seen in characters like or .

It strongly belongs to scientific and anatomical vocabulary in modern usage.

In East Asian languages, it functions almost identically to the Western concept of a membrane.

In traditional Chinese medical texts, 膜 refers to:

- internal tissue layers

- protective coverings of organs

Example contexts include descriptions of viscera, fascia, and bodily boundaries.

In Buddhist philosophy, 膜 is sometimes used metaphorically for:

- subtle attachments

- thin veils obscuring insight

Though not a primary doctrinal term, it appears in commentarial language describing the body or perception.

Related characters:

— skin (outer surface)

— shell (hard covering)

— layer (general)

— partition

— cover

— removal of a covering

꺼풀
kkeopul
mak
Kangxi radical:130, + 10
Strokes:15
Unicode:U+819C
Cangjie input:
  • 月廿日大 (BTAK)
Composition:
  • ⿰ 月 莫

Neighboring characters in the dictionary

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