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
 
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Etymology edit

The idea that the human body contains five zang organs and six fu organs is first attested in Lüshi Chunqiu.

六十 [Classical Chinese, trad.]
六十 [Classical Chinese, simp.]
From: Lü Buwei, Master Lü's Spring and Autumn Annals, 239 BCE
Fán rén sān bǎi liùshí jié, jiǔ qiào, zàng, liù . [Pinyin]
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Pronunciation edit


Idiom edit

五臟六腑

  1. The five solid organs and six hollow organs; the internal organs

Descendants edit

Sino-Xenic (五臟六腑):

Vietnamese: lục phủ ngũ tạng

Korean edit

Hanja in this term

Noun edit

五臟六腑 (ojang'yukbu) (hangeul 오장육부)

  1. Hanja form? of 오장육부 (internal organs).