널 (neol): Board · Seesaw · Coffin · You — One Korean Sound, Four Meanings

🎯 One Sound, Four Native Meanings
A plank of wood, a New Year seesaw, a coffin — and, by a turn of sound, the tenderest word of all, "you." Korean says all four with one pure-native sound: 널 (neol). Three are the same board of wood; the fourth is the heart's word. Follow the four arrows.
⬆️ BOARD — 널빤지 (neol-ppan-ji)
A flat, wide-cut piece of wood — a plank: 널빤지 (a plank), 널다리 (a plank bridge), 널문 (a plank door). Before plywood, a home was floored with 널.
널빤지로 다리를 놓았어요. (Neol-ppan-ji-ro da-ri-reul no-a-sseo-yo.) — They built a bridge with planks.
⬅️ SEESAW — 널뛰기 (neol-ttwi-gi)
The same plank becomes play: the springy board of the Korean standing seesaw. On Seollal, women leap in turn, launching each other skyward — some say to peek over the courtyard walls.
설날에 널을 뛰었어요. (Seol-lal-e neol-eul ttwi-eo-sseo-yo.) — We played seesaw on New Year's Day.
➡️ COFFIN — 널 (neol)
The same boards make the last bed: 널 is a coffin, the wooden case for a body. In plain native Korean, a 관(棺) is simply the 널.
관을 널이라고도 해요. (Gwan-eul neol-i-ra-go-do hae-yo.) — A coffin is also called 널.
⬇️ YOU — 널 사랑해 (neol sa-rang-hae)
By a turn of sound, 널 is also the most intimate word — a contraction of 너를 (you). 널 사랑해 = 너를 사랑해, "I love you."
널 처음 봤을 때. (Neol cheo-eum bwa-sseul ttae.) — When I first saw you.
⚡ Memory Anchor
Three of the four 널 are the same flat board of wood: the plank you build with, the seesaw you leap on, the coffin you rest in — one wood, from the floor of a house to the last bed. And the fourth 널, by chance of sound, is the tenderest word of all: 너를, "you."
⚡ At a Glance
| ⬆️ BOARD | a wooden plank | 널빤지 | a plank |
| ⬅️ SEESAW | the Korean seesaw | 널뛰기 | a seesaw |
| ➡️ COFFIN | a coffin | 널 | a coffin |
| ⬇️ YOU | you (object) | 널 사랑해 | I love you |
📌 In One Line
널 (neol) turns one native sound into a whole life in wood — the plank of a house, the seesaw of a festival, the coffin at the end — and then, softest of all, the word "you." Korea's oldest game (널뛰기) and its most-sung line (널 사랑해) share a single sound.
K-Word Arrows: Korean Homonyms Visualized
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