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K-Word Arrows: Korean Homonyms Visualize

공 (Gong) — Four Korean Meanings from Four Different Chinese Characters (Ball, Zero, Study, Achievement)

by 뿌리를찾아서 2026. 6. 20.
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One Sound, Four Different Origins

In Korean, the single syllable 공 (gong) has four completely different meanings — each from a different Chinese character (한자). This makes 공 one of the most diverse Korean homonyms.

Meaning Chinese character (Hanja) Origin

Ball 球 (구) sphere
Zero 零 (령/영) nothing
Study 工夫 (공부) labor + skill
Achievement 功 (공) merit

For Korean learners, 공 is a perfect window into how one sound can carry four worlds of meaning.

Let's untangle this — visually.

[다이어그램 위치]

공 — Four Directions, Four Meanings

Direction Meaning Korean Romanization

↑ Up ball gong
→ Right zero gong
← Left study 공부 gong-bu
↓ Down achievement gong

One sound. Four meanings. One picture.

↑ Up — 공 (gong): Ball

공을 던져요. Gong-eul deon-jyeo-yo. I throw the ball.

The noun 공 (gong) means ball — used for any sport ball (soccer, baseball, basketball, etc.).

Common phrases:

  • 축구공 (chuk-gu-gong) — soccer ball
  • 야구공 (ya-gu-gong) — baseball
  • 농구공 (nong-gu-gong) — basketball
  • 공놀이 (gong-no-ri) — playing with a ball
  • 공을 차다 (gong-eul cha-da) — to kick a ball
  • 공을 던지다 (gong-eul deon-ji-da) — to throw a ball

Chinese character origin: 球 (구) = sphere, ball

K-sports connection: Korean sports culture loves "gong" — soccer (축구, chuk-gu) is the most popular sport. Names like 손흥민 (Son Heung-min, Tottenham) and 이강인 (Lee Kang-in, Paris Saint-Germain) have made Korean soccer globally famous.

→ Right — 공 (gong): Zero (Number)

공일공 사구오삼... Gong-il-gong sa-gu-o-sam... Zero-one-zero four-nine-five-three... (Reading a Korean phone number)

The noun 공 (gong) also means zero — used especially when reading numbers aloud, like phone numbers or addresses.

Common phrases:

  • 공일공 (gong-il-gong) — 010 (Korean mobile prefix)
  • 공공칠 (gong-gong-chil) — 007 (like James Bond)
  • 공백 (gong-baek) — blank space
  • 공 점 일 (gong jeom il) — zero point one (0.1)

Chinese character origin: 零 (령/영) = nothing, zero

Korean culture — phone numbers: When Koreans read phone numbers, they often use "공" instead of "영" (the standard word for zero). For example:

  • 010-1234-5678 is read as: 공일공-일이삼사-오육칠팔 (gong-il-gong il-i-sam-sa o-yuk-chil-pal)

This is the most common way Koreans say their phone numbers aloud.

← Left — 공부 (gong-bu): Study

공부를 열심히 해요. Gong-bu-reul yeol-sim-hi hae-yo. I study hard.

The noun 공부 (gong-bu) means study/studying — one of the most important words in Korean culture.

Common phrases:

  • 공부를 하다 (gong-bu-reul ha-da) — to study
  • 공부 잘하다 (gong-bu jal-ha-da) — to be good at studying
  • 공부 못하다 (gong-bu mot-ha-da) — to be bad at studying
  • 공부방 (gong-bu-bang) — study room
  • 공부벌레 (gong-bu-beol-le) — bookworm (literally "study bug")
  • 시험공부 (si-heom-gong-bu) — exam preparation
  • 영어공부 (yeong-eo-gong-bu) — English study
  • 한국어공부 (han-gu-geo-gong-bu) — Korean study

Chinese character origin: 工夫 (공부) = labor (工) + skill (夫)

Korean culture — 공부 is sacred: Gong-bu is at the heart of Korean education culture. Korean students study an average of 12~16 hours per day during high school. The Korean 수능 (Suneung, college entrance exam) is so important that the entire country pauses — flights are delayed, businesses close, and even the stock market opens late on exam day.

Famous Korean phrase:

  • "공부가 제일 쉬웠어요" (gong-bu-ga je-il swi-wo-sseo-yo)
  • "Studying was the easiest thing" — a famous quote from a Korean book about overcoming poverty through study.

↓ Down — 공 (gong): Achievement / Merit

그는 큰 공을 세웠어요. Geu-neun keun gong-eul se-wo-sseo-yo. He earned great merit. / He achieved something great.

The noun 공 (gong) in this formal sense means achievement, merit, or contribution — typically used in formal or historical contexts.

Common phrases:

  • 공을 세우다 (gong-eul se-u-da) — to achieve merit
  • 공로 (gong-ro) — meritorious service
  • 공신 (gong-sin) — meritorious subject
  • 공적 (gong-jeok) — achievement, accomplishment
  • 공헌 (gong-heon) — contribution
  • 공로상 (gong-ro-sang) — service award

Chinese character origin: 功 (공) = merit, achievement

Korean culture — formal recognition: This meaning is used in:

  • Government awards (정부 표창)
  • Historical heroes (역사 영웅)
  • Corporate recognition (회사 공로상)
  • Academic citations (학술 공로)

Famous historical example:

  • 이순신 장군 (Admiral Yi Sun-sin) is said to have 세상에 큰 공을 세웠다 (made great merit for the world) — referring to his naval victories during the Japanese invasions (1592~1598).

How to Tell Them Apart

Context decides which 공 you hear. Here's how to decode:

Look for... Meaning

Sports verbs (던지다, 차다, 놀다) ball (공)
Phone numbers, addresses zero (공)
부 (added) → 공부 study (공부)
Formal context (세우다, 로) achievement (공)

Try It Yourself

Can you guess which 공 is used in each sentence?

Sentence ball / zero / study / achievement?

1. 공일공-사구오삼-팔이일오 ?
2. 공부 안 하면 시험 못 봐. ?
3. 축구공이 어디 있어요? ?
4. 이 분이 큰 공을 세우셨습니다. ?

Answers:

  1. zero (Reading a phone number: 010-4953-8215)
  2. study (If you don't study, you can't do well on the exam)
  3. ball (Where is the soccer ball?)
  4. achievement (This person has achieved great merit) — formal speech

Key Takeaway

공 (gong) is one syllable with four distinct meanings — ball, zero, study, achievement. Each comes from a different Chinese character: 球 (sphere), 零 (nothing), 工夫 (labor+skill), 功 (merit). Context, particles, and compound words make them clear. One sound covers sports, numbers, education, and formal honor. Once mapped visually, the confusion disappears.

Pronunciation Tip

All four meanings are pronounced exactly the same: gong (sounds like "gong" the musical instrument, but shorter). For "study," add bu: gong-bu.

Bonus — Why Koreans Love "공" for Phone Numbers

You'll notice Koreans often say "공일공" (gong-il-gong) instead of "영일영" (yeong-il-yeong) for 010. Why?

Reason Explanation

Sound clarity "gong" is shorter and sharper than "yeong"
Speed Easier to say quickly
Tradition Phone operators historically used "gong"
Cultural habit Now standard for numbers

Both and mean zero, but is preferred for spoken numbers.

Bonus — 공부 (Study) in Korean Culture

If you're learning Korean, you'll hear "공부" every single day. Korean culture deeply values education:

Cultural element Connection to 공부

수능 (Suneung) National college entrance exam
학원 (hak-won) Private cram schools
공부방 (study room) Every Korean home has one
공부벌레 (bookworm) Slightly mocking but admiring term
밤샘공부 (all-nighter study) All-night studying
K-drama School dramas (학원드라마) are a huge genre

Famous Korean saying:

  • "공부에는 왕도가 없다" (gong-bu-e-neun wang-do-ga eop-da)
  • "There is no royal road to learning."

Coming Next — 손 (son)

Next we map another Korean homonym: 손 (son) — meaning hand, guest, and loss. Three meanings, one sound, central to Korean business and family life.

도움이 되셨다면 구독, 공감 한 번 부탁드립니다. (Thank you for reading!)


K-Word Arrows: Korean Homonyms Visualized ⓒ wordiya.com

 

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