Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Hao

Meaning — A Chinese given name written most commonly as 浩 meaning "vast" or "grand" (often of water or sky), 昊 meaning "vast sky" or "heaven", or 好 meaning "good" or "fine". The character 浩 evokes the immensity of the natural world — a name often given with aspirations of great-heartedness or broad perspective. Hao is predominantly masculine.·Chinese origin·Gender-Neutral·how (rhymes with "cow"; even stress)

Hao Hao written as 浩 (vast) evokes a person of expansive nature — big in generosity, ambition, or emotional capacity. In Chinese naming culture, parents choosing this character for a son often want to suggest someone who will not be limited by circumstance, someone whose spirit matches the open sky. A character named Hao works well as an idealistic young man whose optimism is tested by historical forces beyond his control.

Best genres for Hao

Historical FictionWuxiaAdventureFamily SagaLiterary Fiction

Famous characters named Hao

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


Variations & nicknames

HaoHào

Pairs well with

Hao ChenHao LiuHao ZhangHao WangHao LiHao HuangHao WuHao Zhao

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Sheng

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Chinese · “A Chinese given name written as 博 meaning "broad", "learned", or "encyclopedic" (as in 博学, broad learning), or 波 meaning "wave". The character 博 is used in the word for a doctorate (博士, boshi, literally "broad scholar"), making this a name strongly associated with scholarly ambition and wide-ranging knowledge. It is predominantly masculine in China.

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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.

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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.

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A Chinese given name written as 天 meaning "sky" or "heaven", or 田 meaning "field" (particularly rice paddies). The character 天 (heaven) is one of the most fundamental concepts in Chinese cosmology — tian is the overarching moral order of the universe, the source of the Mandate of Heaven (天命, tianming) that legitimizes imperial rule. As a given name, it suggests someone of elevated destiny.

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