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69Byeong-ho is a Korean masculine given name, written with the sino-Korean elements 炳 (byeong) meaning "bright, luminous, glorious" and 浩 (ho) meaning "great, numerous, vast" or 昊 (ho) meaning "summer, sky, heaven." Oth...
Byung-ho is an alternate transcription of the Korean Hangul name 병호 (Byeong-ho). In South Korea, romanization of Korean names has historically varied, leading to multiple spellings, including Byung-ho, Byong-ho, and Py...
Dae-jung is a Korean masculine given name typically composed of the hanja characters 大 (dae), meaning "big, great, vast, large, high," and 中 (jung), meaning "middle." However, other hanja combinations can also form thi...
Dae-seong (대성) is a Korean masculine given name composed of two Sino-Korean syllables. Dae (대/大) means "big, great, vast, large, high," and seong (성/成) means "completed, finished, succeeded." The name thus conveys...
Do-hyeon is a Korean masculine given name formed by two Sino-Korean syllables. The first element do can be written with hanja characters such as 度 (do) meaning "size, extent, limit", while the second element hyeon often...
Dong-geun, also spelled Dong-keun, is a Korean masculine given name. The name is composed of two Sino-Korean syllables: 동 (dong), meaning “east,” and 근 (geun), meaning “root” or “foundation.” While these characters are...
Dong-hyeon (also spelled Dong-hyun) is a Korean masculine given name formed from Sino-Korean components. The first element is 동 (dong), meaning "east," often represented by the hanja 東. The second element is 현 (hyeon)...
Dong-hyun (also spelled Dong-hyeon) is a Korean masculine given name. It is an alternate transcription of the Korean Hangul 동현 (see Dong-hyeon). Etymology The name Dong-hyun is typically derived from Sino-Korean charac...
Do-yun is a Korean masculine given name. The name is formed from Sino-Korean characters, most commonly do (道), meaning "path, road, way", and yun (允), meaning "allow, consent". However, other hanja combinations are pos...
Geon-u is a Korean masculine given name, also spelled Keon-woo, Gun-woo, or Kun-wood. It was the sixth-most popular name for baby boys born in South Korea in 2008, with 1,722 boys given the name. Etymology and Meaning Th...
Gun-woo is a Korean masculine given name, an alternate transcription of Geon-u (건우). Like other Korean names, it is typically formed by combining two syllables, each with its own Sino-Korean root, and the spelling may...
Ha-joon is a Korean given name, typically spelled 하준 in Hangul. It is an alternate transcription of Ha-jun, the latter being a common romanization. The name combines elements from ha (meaning "summer, great, grand") an...
Ha-jun is a Korean masculine given name composed of two Sino-Korean characters. The first syllable, ha, can be written with the hanja 夏 (ha) meaning "summer, great, grand," among other possibilities. The second syllable...
Hwan is a Korean unisex given name (though more commonly used for males) as well as a rare family name. Its meaning depends on the hanja (Sino-Korean characters) used to write it.Etymology and MeaningAs a given name or n...
Hye is a Korean given name, most commonly used for males, though it is not inherently gender-specific. The name is often written with the Sino-Korean character 慧 (hye) meaning "bright, intelligent," though other homopho...
Hyeon-jun is a Korean masculine given name, constructed from Sino-Korean characters (hanja). The first syllable hyeon is commonly represented by characters such as 賢 (hyeon) meaning "virtuous, worthy, able" or 鉉 (hyeon...
Hyeon-u is a Korean masculine given name composed of Sino-Korean characters. The first element hyeon can be written with the hanja 賢 (hyeon) meaning "virtuous, worthy, able" or 顯 (hyeon) meaning "manifest, clear". The...
Hyun-woo is a Korean given name, typically romanized from the Hangul 현우. It is an alternate transcription of the name Hyeon-u, which can be formed from various Sino-Korean hanja character combinations.EtymologyThe name...
I-jun is a Korean masculine given name formed by combining Sino-Korean characters. The name is composed of 利 (i) meaning "advantage, benefit" and 准 (jun) meaning "approve, permit," though other hanja combinations are p...
Il-seong is a Korean male given name formed from Sino-Korean elements. The first syllable, il, can mean "sun, day," as in il (日), while the second syllable seong often means "completed, finished, succeeded," as in seong...
Jae-seong is a Korean masculine given name formed from Sino-Korean characters. The first syllable, jae, can be written with hanja such as 在 meaning "located at, exist" or 宰 meaning "kill, rule". The second syllable, se...
Jeong-ho is a Korean given name formed from Sino-Korean characters. The exact meaning depends on the hanja used; common combinations include 正 (jeong) meaning "right, proper, correct" with 好 (ho) meaning "good, excelle...
Jeong-hun (also spelled Jung-hoon or Jung-hun) is a Korean masculine given name. It was a popular choice for baby boys in South Korea during the mid-to-late 20th century, ranking tenth in 1960, first in 1970, and third i...
Ji-hoon is an alternate transcription of Korean Hangul 지훈, typically corresponding to the name Ji-hun. Ji-hoon (or Ji-hun) is a popular Korean male given name formed by combining Sino-Korean characters. Common elements...
Ji-hun (also spelled Ji-hoon) is a common Korean masculine given name, written in Sino-Korean characters. The first element can be ji meaning "wisdom, intellect" (智) or "will, purpose, ambition" (志), while the second e...
Jin-ho is a Korean given name, typically masculine, composed of two Sino-Korean morphemes. The jin element often derives from the hanja 珍 (jin), meaning "precious" or "rare", while the ho element frequently comes from...
Jin-u is a Korean masculine given name. It is typically composed of two Sino-Korean morphemes: the first syllable jin can be written with hanja such as 鎭 (jin) meaning “town, marketplace” or 珍 (jin) meaning “precious,...
Jin-woo is a Korean masculine given name, an alternate transcription of the Hangul 진우 (see Jin-u). Like many Korean names, Jin-woo is composed of two syllables, each corresponding to a hanja (Sino-Korean character) cho...
Jong-su is a Korean masculine given name. It is formed from Sino-Korean hanja characters, most commonly 宗 (jong, meaning "lineage, ancestry") and 秀 (su, meaning "luxuriant, beautiful, elegant, outstanding"). However, v...
Joon is a Korean masculine given name, an alternate transcription of the Hangul 준 (jun). It corresponds to the Sino-Korean name Jun 1, which can be formed from various hanja characters, including 俊 meaning "talented, h...
Joon-ho is a Korean male given name, an alternate transcription of the Hangul 준호 (see Jun-ho). The name is composed of two Sino-Korean syllables, typically jun meaning "talented, handsome" and ho meaning "stove, bright...
Jung-ho is an alternate transcription of the Korean given name Jeong-ho (정호). The name is typically composed of two Sino-Korean morphemes, usually 正 (jeong) meaning "right, proper, correct" combined with either 好 (ho...
Jung-hoon is a Korean masculine given name, an alternate transcription of Korean Hangul 정훈 (see Jeong-hun). The name was highly popular in South Korea during the mid-to-late 20th century, ranking tenth in 1960, first i...
Jun-ho (also spelled Joon-ho) is a Korean masculine given name. Its meaning derives from the Sino-Korean characters used to write it. The most common forms combine 俊 (jun) meaning "talented, handsome" with either 鎬 (ho...
Jun-seo (also spelled Joon-seo, Joon-suh, or Jun-suh) is a Korean masculine given name. It is formed by combining Sino-Korean 俊 (jun) meaning "talented, handsome" with either 舒 (seo) meaning "open up, unfold, comfortab...
Jun-u is a Korean masculine given name composed of two Sino-Korean characters. The first element, usually written as jun (俊), conveys meanings of talent and handsomeness, while the second element, u (優), expresses supe...
Kun-woo is a Korean given name, an alternate transcription of the Hangul 건우 (see Geon-u). It is a popular name for boys in South Korea. Etymology The name is derived from the Sino-Korean elements 建 meaning "build, est...
Min-gyu (also spelled Min-kyu) is a Korean given name for boys. It was the eighth-most popular name for baby boys in South Korea in 1990. The name is composed of two syllables written with various hanja (Sino-Korean char...
Min-ho is a Korean masculine given name composed of two Sino-Korean elements. The first syllable, min, derived from 敏 meaning "quick, clever, sharp." The second syllable, ho, can be written with various hanja characters...
Min-jae is a Korean given name, typically masculine, composed of two Sino-Korean syllables. The first syllable, min, can be written with hanja characters such as 珉 or 玟, both meaning "jade" or "stone resembling jade"....
Min-jun, also spelled Min-joon, is a popular Korean masculine given name with a compound Sino-Korean origin. The name is typically formed by combining a syllable min (meaning “quick, clever, sharp” from the hanja 敏 or “...
Min-kyu (also spelled Min-gyu) is a Korean male given name that follows the conventions of Korean naming: it consists of two syllables written in Hangul as 민 and 규, and can be written in Hanja (Sino-Korean characters)....
Min-su is a popular Korean male given name that has been consistently common in South Korea since the late 20th century. It ranked as the fifth-most popular name for baby boys in 1990 and is also romanized as Min-soo.Ety...
Pyong-ho is a Korean masculine given name, an alternate transcription of Korean Hangul 병호 (see Byeong-ho). The name is typically composed of two Sino-Korean syllables: 《병》(byeong) meaning "bright, luminous, glorious...
Sang-hun is a Korean given name, typically masculine, that has been popular in South Korea since the mid-20th century. It ranked among the top nine names for baby boys in 1960 and 1970, according to government data. Etym...
Seo-joon is an alternate transcription of the Korean given name Seo-jun, rendered in Hangul as 서준. The name is predominantly masculine and is used in South Korea. Its meaning derives from Sino-Korean characters, most c...
Seo-jun, also spelled Seo-joon or Suh-jun/Suh-joon, is a popular South Korean male given name. The name is typically formed from Sino-Korean characters, with seo (瑞, meaning "felicitous omen" or "auspicious") or seo (舒...
Seok is a Korean masculine given name. In Korean, it is written with Hangul as 석 and can be derived from various Sino-Korean characters. The most common ones include the character 石 (seok) meaning "stone" and 錫 (seok)...
Seok-jin is a Korean masculine given name. It is typically composed of two Sino-Korean syllables, seok and jin, each written with a hanja character. The most common combination uses the characters seok (碩) meaning "larg...
Seong-ho is a Korean masculine given name primarily composed of Sino-Korean morphemes. The first element seong can come from 成 (seong) meaning 'completed, finished, succeeded' or 盛 (seong) meaning 'abundant, flourishin...
Seong-hun is a Korean masculine given name, also spelled Sung-hoon. It was the fifth-most popular name for baby boys in South Korea in 1970, falling to sixth place in 1980. The name is composed of two Sino-Korean syllabl...
Seong-jin is a Korean male given name, also spelled Sung-jin or Song-jin. It is composed of two syllables: seong, which can mean "completed, finished, succeeded" (from the hanja 成) or "star, planet" (星), and jin, which...
Seong-min is a Korean masculine given name, commonly transcribed in the Revised Romanization system. It originated as an alternative spelling of Sung-min, and both forms remain in use, though official documents prefer th...
Seong-su (also spelled Sung-soo, Song-su) is a Korean male given name. Its popularity peaked in mid-20th century South Korea: it was the third-most popular name for baby boys in 1950, falling to seventh place in 1960.Ety...
Suk is a Korean masculine name that serves as an alternative transcription of Korean Hangul 석 (see Seok).Etymology and MeaningThe component Hangul 석 is typically derived from Sino-Korean roots: 石 (seok) meaning "stone...
Sung-ho is a Korean given name, representing an alternate transcription of Seong-ho. The late Romanization system that produced "Sung-ho" was common in South Korea from the 1950s through the 1970s, and this spelling was...
Sung-hoon is an alternate transcription of the Korean given name Seong-hun, written in Korean Hangul as 성훈. It is a masculine name commonly used in South Korea.EtymologyThe name combines two Sino-Korean syllables: seon...
Sung-jin is a Korean given name. It is an alternate transcription of the Korean Hangul 성진, which is also commonly romanized as Seong-jin. The name can be written with various combinations of hanja (Sino-Korean characte...
Sung-min (also spelled Seong-min) is an alternate transcription of the Korean given name Seong-min, written in Hangul as 성민. It is predominantly masculine. Etymology and Meaning The name combines Sino-Korean elements....
Sung-soo is an alternate transcription of the Korean Hangul 성수 (Seong-su). It is a masculine given name in Korea, derived from a combination of Sino-Korean characters. The first element is usually seong (成), meaning "...