Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Fei

Meaning — A Chinese given name written as 飞 meaning "to fly" or "swift as flight", or 菲 meaning "fragrant" or "luxuriant" (of plants), often used for women. The character 飞 evokes freedom, speed, and the liberation of leaving the ground — in Chinese poetry, flight is a metaphor for transcendence and the spirit's desire to escape the mundane. 菲 connects to gentle fragrance and natural beauty.·Chinese origin·Gender-Neutral·fay (even stress)

Fei Fei written as 飞 (to fly) names someone for whom freedom and transcendence are central drives — a character who chafes against confinement, whether physical, social, or emotional. In wuxia fiction, the lightfoot martial artist (qinggong, literally "light skill") embodies this quality. Written as 菲 (fragrant/luxuriant), the name is more grounded, suggesting someone whose quiet abundance and natural warmth draw others to them.

Best genres for Fei

Literary FictionWuxiaHistorical FictionContemporary FictionFamily Saga

Famous characters named Fei

No verified literary characters with this exact given name were found yet. We are continuously expanding this section.


Variations & nicknames

FeiFēi

Pairs well with

Fei ChenFei LiuFei ZhangFei WangFei LiFei HuangFei WuFei Lin

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Related names

Yi

Chinese · “A Chinese given name of great philosophical depth: written as 义 it means "righteousness" or "justice", as 易 it means "change" or "ease" (as in the I Ching, the classic Book of Changes), and as 怡 it means "cheerful" or "harmonious". The I Ching (易经) is one of the oldest Chinese texts, making Yi a name resonant with ideas of transformation and cosmic order.

Yue

Chinese · “A Chinese given name written most commonly as 月 meaning "moon", or 悦 meaning "joyful" or "pleased". The moon (月) holds a singular place in Chinese culture — the Mid-Autumn Festival is centered on it, and it is the dominant symbol in Chinese poetry of longing, reunion, and the passage of time. Li Bai's famous lines about seeing the moon and thinking of home have made 月 one of the most emotionally loaded images in the Chinese poetic tradition.

Mei

Chinese · “A Chinese given name most commonly written as 梅 meaning "plum blossom" or 美 meaning "beautiful". The plum blossom (梅) blooms in winter, before any other flower, and is one of the "Four Gentlemen" of classical Chinese painting — a symbol of perseverance, purity, and courage in adversity. The national flower of the Republic of China, it holds deep cultural significance.

Qiu

Chinese · “A Chinese given name written as 秋 meaning "autumn" — the season of harvest, ripening, clear skies, and the melancholy of endings. Autumn is also the season of the Moon Festival and one of the most fertile periods in Chinese classical poetry. Qiu is also the birth name of Confucius (孔丘), giving it a profound intellectual and moral association for those familiar with classical Chinese thought.

Ning

Chinese · “A Chinese given name written as 宁 meaning "peaceful", "tranquil", or "to prefer". The character is used in the expression 宁可 (ningke, "would rather", "prefer"), giving it a quality of quiet resolve — the person who knows what they prefer and will hold to it. In the context of naming, Ning expresses the parental wish for a child to lead a peaceful life, an aspiration often given in eras of conflict.


More Chinese names

Zhen

A Chinese given name written as 真 meaning "true", "genuine", or "real", or 珍 meaning "precious" or "treasure". The character 真 is philosophically significant in Daoist thought — zhen (authenticity or reality) is one of the highest states of being, achieved by the sage who has shed social pretense. 珍 is more personal and affectionate, often given to express how treasured a child is.

Jing

A Chinese given name written variously as 静 meaning "quiet" or "still", 晶 meaning "crystal" or "sparkling", or 敬 meaning "respect" or "reverence". The character 静 is one of the most culturally resonant, associated in Daoist and Buddhist thought with the stillness that underlies all perception. Jing is popular for both women and men in China.

Xiu

A Chinese given name written as 秀 meaning "elegant", "graceful", or "excellent" (as in excelling above others, like a plant that grows tall). It can also be written as 修 meaning "to cultivate" or "to repair", suggesting self-improvement and discipline. The character 秀 is one of the classical words for feminine beauty and scholarly distinction.

Ying

A Chinese given name written as 英 meaning "outstanding", "heroic", or "flower of a plant" (especially the cherry or apricot blossom), or 莹 meaning "lustrous" or "jade-like". The character 英 appears in the word 英雄 (yingxiong, hero), making it a name with explicit heroic resonance. It is also the character in the Chinese word for England (英国, Yingguo, "heroic country").

Sheng

A Chinese given name written as 盛 meaning "flourishing", "prosperous", or "grand", or 胜 meaning "victory" or "to surpass". The character 盛 conjures the image of abundance — the peak of a dynasty or a season at its fullest, before the inevitable decline. This seasonal metaphor gives the name a touch of elegance alongside its aspirational power.

Ding

A Chinese given name written as 丁 — a character whose literal original meaning was a nail or nail-shaped object, but which evolved to mean "person" in certain legal and demographic contexts (丁口, the registered population). It is also the fourth Heavenly Stem in the Chinese calendar system, suggesting an ordered place in the cosmic scheme. As a given name, Ding is simple and distinctive.


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