五臟六腑
Chinese edit
five internal organs | |||
---|---|---|---|
trad. (五臟六腑) | 五臟 | 六腑 | |
simp. (五脏六腑) | 五脏 | 六腑 | |
alternative forms | 五藏六府 |
Etymology edit
The idea that the human body contains five zang organs and six fu organs is first attested in Lüshi Chunqiu.
Pronunciation edit
Idiom edit
五臟六腑
- The five solid organs and six hollow organs; the internal organs
Descendants edit
Sino-Xenic (五臟六腑):
- → Japanese: 五臓六腑 (gozō roppu)
- → Korean: 오장육부(五臟六腑) (ojang'yukbu)
- → Vietnamese: ngũ tạng lục phủ (五臟六腑)
⇒ Vietnamese: lục phủ ngũ tạng
Korean edit
Hanja in this term | |||
---|---|---|---|
五 | 臟 | 六 | 腑 |
Noun edit
五臟六腑 • (ojang'yukbu) (hangeul 오장육부)
- Hanja form? of 오장육부 (“internal organs”).