轍
- wheel track;
- rut;
- course;
- precedent;
Etymology
A phono-semantic compound:
車 (cart, vehicle) — semantic component, clearly indicates relation to vehicles
徹 (to penetrate; thorough) — phonetic component (abbreviated), supplies the sound and contributes the idea of continuity or penetration, fitting the notion of a clearly marked track.
The original meaning of 轍 is the groove or track left in the ground by a wheeled vehicle, especially carts and chariots in ancient China. Because roads were often unpaved, repeated passage carved visible ruts into the earth.
From the concrete sense of a wheel rut, the meaning expanded metaphorically:
- following the same 轍 → repeating past actions
- breaking from the 轍 → departing from precedent
- old 轍 → outdated methods or habits
Thus, 轍 came to signify precedent, established practice, or habitual course.
Usage in Korean
전철 (前轍) — precedent; previous example
전철을 밟다 — to repeat the same mistake
전철을 되풀이하다 — to fall into the same pattern again
Additional notes
轍 reflects a shared East Asian metaphor:
"Human actions, like carts, leave tracks. Those who come later may choose whether to follow them."
Because of this, 轍 frequently appears in moral, political, and historical discourse.
A well-known classical phrase:
前轍可鑑 — “the previous wheel tracks may serve as a warning” → learn from past mistakes.
This reflects a common theme in classical Chinese thought: history as guidance.
Related characters:
跡 — trace, footprint
痕 — mark, scar
軌 — track; standard
道 — road; path
循 — to follow; to adhere to
Words that derived from 轍
- 十十卜月大 (JJYBK)
- ⿲ 車 育 攵
- ⿰ 車 𰕎