Character Name
Hae-in
Hae-in Hae-in (海仁, benevolence of the sea) names a character at the conjunction of the most expansive natural image and the highest Confucian virtue. The sea's benevolence is not gentle or limited: it is vast, sustaining, and capable of great force. A character named Hae-in may have a quality of apparently boundless care for others that has real power behind it — someone whose benevolence is not meek or deferential but oceanic in its scope and capacity. The name suits protagonists of unusual moral depth and natural authority.
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Famous characters named Hae-in
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Related names
Soo-min
Korean · “A Korean given name combining soo (수) and min (민). Soo is written as 秀 (elegant, excellent — the same character as Chinese Xiu) or 受 (to receive, to accept). Min is written as 民 (people, the common people) or 敏 (quick-witted, alert). Soo-min thus suggests "elegant and quick-witted" or "excellent among the people" — a name with broad social as well as individual meaning. Soo-min is used for both men and women.”
Ji-eun
Korean · “A Korean given name combining ji (지) and eun (은). Ji is written as 智 (wisdom) or 知 (knowledge, to know). Eun is written as 恩 (grace, favor, beneficence — the same character as Chinese En) or 銀 (silver). Ji-eun thus suggests "wisdom and grace" or "the silver of knowledge". The grace/favor meaning of 恩 gives the name a quality of received and given beneficence. Ji-eun is predominantly feminine.”
Tae-hyun
Korean · “A Korean given name combining tae (태) and hyun (현). Tae is written as 泰 (grand, peaceful, exalted — as in the mountain Taesan, the Chinese Mount Tai 泰山, symbol of supreme solidity) or 太 (great, extreme). Hyun is written as 賢 (virtuous) or 炫 (brilliant, shining). Tae-hyun thus suggests "grandly virtuous" or "brilliance of the highest order" — a name with a mountainous scale of aspiration.”
Kyung-min
Korean · “A Korean given name combining kyung (경) and min (민). Kyung is written as 慶 (celebration, good fortune, auspicious occasion) or 京 (capital city). Min is written as 敏 (quick-witted, alert) or 珉 (jade-like stone). Kyung-min thus suggests "celebratory brilliance" or "bright as the capital" — a name that combines civic pride or auspiciousness with mental quickness.”
Ki-tae
Korean · “A Korean given name combining ki (기) and tae (태). Ki is written as 基 (foundation, base) or 氣 (energy, breath, vital force — the Korean/Chinese concept of qi). Tae is written as 泰 (grand, peaceful) or 太 (great, extreme). Ki-tae thus suggests "the grand foundation" or "the vital force of greatness" — a name of fundamental strength and energy. The qi/ki meaning is particularly resonant in Korean martial arts and philosophical tradition.”
More Korean names
Dae-hyun
“A Korean given name combining dae (대) and hyun (현). Dae is written as 大 (great, large) or 代 (generation, era, to represent). Hyun is written as 賢 (virtuous/worthy) or 炫 (brilliant). Dae-hyun thus suggests "greatly virtuous" or "brilliant representative of a generation" — a name with both personal aspiration and generational resonance. The generation meaning (代) connects the name to ideas of historical continuity and succession.”
Bo-ram
“A Korean given name written purely in the native Korean language (고유어 / goyueo) rather than hanja — it means "worthwhile", "rewarding", or "meaningful". Bo-ram is one of the few Korean given names that is not Sino-Korean in origin, making it distinctively Korean in character. The meaning of "something that is worth doing, worth having" is expressed without recourse to Chinese characters, giving it an earthy, warm quality.”
Soo-min
“A Korean given name combining soo (수) and min (민). Soo is written as 秀 (elegant, excellent — the same character as Chinese Xiu) or 受 (to receive, to accept). Min is written as 民 (people, the common people) or 敏 (quick-witted, alert). Soo-min thus suggests "elegant and quick-witted" or "excellent among the people" — a name with broad social as well as individual meaning. Soo-min is used for both men and women.”
Hyo-jin
“A Korean given name combining hyo (효) and jin (진). Hyo is written as 孝 (filial piety — the same Confucian virtue as Japanese Takashi's ko) — devotion to parents and ancestors. Jin is written as 珍 (precious, treasure) or 眞 (true, genuine). Hyo-jin thus suggests "precious filial virtue" or "truly filial" — a name that places the Confucian virtue of family devotion at the center of a character's identity.”
Young-ho
“A Korean given name combining young (영) and ho (호). Young is written as 英 (outstanding, heroic — same character as Chinese Ying) or 永 (eternal, permanent). Ho is written as 浩 (vast, as of water or sky — same as Chinese Hao) or 護 (to protect, to guard). Young-ho thus suggests "eternally vast" or "heroically protective" — a name associated with the generation of Korean men born between the 1960s and 1980s.”
Do-yoon
“A Korean given name combining do (도) and yoon (윤). Do is written as 道 (the Way, path, principle) or 度 (degree, measure, generosity of mind). Yoon is written as 尹 (to govern, to guide) or 允 (to allow, sincere, trustworthy). Do-yoon thus suggests "one who walks the Way with sincerity" or "a measured leader of principle". The Daoist resonance of 道 (the Way) is significant in the Korean philosophical tradition.”
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