Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Hae-won

Meaning — A Korean given name combining hae (해) and won (원). Hae is written as 海 (sea/ocean) or 解 (to untie, to release, to understand). Won is written as 媛 (a beautiful and talented woman) or 源 (source, origin). Hae-won thus suggests "a woman as vast as the sea" or "the source that releases understanding". Hae-won is predominantly feminine, evoking both natural majesty and a capacity for insight.·Korean origin·Gender-Neutral·HEH-won

Hae-won Hae-won (海媛, woman of the sea) names a character with the depth and expansiveness of the ocean — someone whose surface is only a fraction of what lies beneath, whose inner world is rich, complex, and not easily sounded. The sea in Korean literary culture evokes both abundance and danger: it provides and it takes away, it connects and it separates. Characters named Hae-won often carry this quality of immense, sometimes threatening depth beneath a composed exterior.

Best genres for Hae-won

Contemporary FictionLiterary FictionRomanceFamily SagaHistorical Fiction

Famous characters named Hae-won

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


Variations & nicknames

Hae-wonHaewonHae-weon

Pairs well with

Hae-won KimHae-won LeeHae-won ParkHae-won ChoiHae-won JungHae-won HanHae-won YoonHae-won Lim

Writing a character named Hae-won?

Hearth's distraction-free editor helps you develop characters and write every day.

Start writing free

Related names

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.

Seo-yeon

Korean · “A Korean given name combining seo (서) and yeon (연). Seo is written as 書 (writing/calligraphy) or 瑞 (auspicious omen). Yeon is written as 娟 (graceful, beautiful) or 蓮 (lotus — the same Buddhist symbol as Japanese Ren). Seo-yeon thus suggests "auspiciously graceful" or "the lotus of scholarship". Seo-yeon is consistently among the most popular girls' names in South Korea.

Eun-ji

Korean · “A Korean given name combining eun (은) and ji (지). Eun is written as 恩 (grace, favor) or 銀 (silver). Ji is written as 智 (wisdom) or 知 (knowledge). Eun-ji thus suggests "graceful wisdom" or "the silver of knowledge". The pairing of grace/favor (恩) with wisdom (智) creates a character defined by beneficent intelligence — a quality of wisdom that is fundamentally oriented toward others' good. Eun-ji is predominantly feminine.

Seok-jin

Korean · “A Korean given name combining seok (석) and jin (진). Seok is written as 碩 (great, large, eminent — used in 碩士, master's degree, literally "great scholar") or 錫 (tin, but in naming context "to bestow"). Jin is written as 珍 (precious) or 眞 (true/genuine). Seok-jin thus suggests "eminently precious" or "a great and genuine scholar" — a name of considerable scholarly and personal aspiration.

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

Woo-jin

A Korean given name combining woo (우) and jin (진). Woo is written as 宇 (universe) or 祐 (divine blessing/protection). Jin is written as 眞 (true/genuine) or 珍 (precious). Woo-jin thus suggests "a genuine universe" or "divinely blessed with preciousness" — a name that combines cosmic scale with personal authenticity. Woo-jin carries a quality of natural, unhurried confidence.

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.

Jin-woo

A Korean given name combining jin (진) and woo (우). Jin is written as 珍 (precious, rare treasure) or 眞 (true, genuine). Woo is written as 宇 (universe/space) or 祐 (divine blessing). Jin-woo thus suggests "true and vast as the universe" or "a precious blessing" — a name that combines authenticity or preciousness with cosmological scale. Jin-woo is among the more popular Korean masculine names.

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.

Seon-woo

A Korean given name combining seon (선) and woo (우). Seon is written as 善 (goodness, moral excellence — the fundamental concept of human goodness in Confucian and Mencian thought) or 仙 (immortal/transcendent — the Daoist xian). Woo is written as 宇 (universe) or 佑 (divine assistance). Seon-woo thus suggests "good as the universe is vast" or "a transcendent one who receives divine blessing" — a name of extraordinary philosophical scope.

Ki-tae

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.


Explore more