陽
- sun, sunlight;
- yang principle;
Etymology
A phono-semantic compound (with associative nuance):
阜 (“hill, mound”) provides the semantic element, referring to land.
昜 (yang, “sunlight, to rise”) provides the phonetic element.
As a whole, 陽 depicts the sun shining on the sunny side of a hill.
Usage in Korean
太陽 (태양) – the sun;
陽光 (양광) – sunlight, rays of the sun;
陽地 (양지) – sunny place, sunlit ground;
陽性 (양성) – positive, active;
陽明 (양명) – brightness, clarity (also linked to Neo-Confucian philosophy: Wang Yangming, 王陽明).
Additional notes
In Yin–Yang theory, 陽 represents the bright, active, masculine, and expansive principle, opposed to 陰 (dark, receptive, feminine).
Associated with the sun, heat, life, vigor, and the southern/sunny side of hills.
Its role in cosmology and medicine (陰陽五行, yin–yang and five phases) is central in East Asian thought.
- 弓中日一竹 (NLAMH)
- ⿰ 阝 昜