Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Jing

Meaning — 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.·Chinese origin·Gender-Neutral·jing (even stress)

Jing Jing written as 静 (stillness) suggests a character who observes more than they speak — someone whose composure masks depths of feeling or knowledge. In the Daoist tradition, stillness (jing) is not passivity but a state of heightened receptivity; a character named Jing may have the capacity to act with extraordinary clarity precisely because they are so rarely agitated. The name works especially well for characters whose emotional interior is deliberately hidden from other characters.

Best genres for Jing

Literary FictionHistorical FictionWuxiaFamily SagaContemporary Fiction

Famous characters named Jing

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


Variations & nicknames

JingJīng

Pairs well with

Jing ChenJing LiuJing ZhangJing WangJing LiJing HuangJing LinJing Wu

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Related names

Ming

Chinese · “A Chinese given name most commonly written as 明, meaning "bright", "clear", or "enlightened". It can also be written as 鸣 meaning "to cry out" or "to sing" (often of birds), or 铭 meaning "inscription" or "to engrave on the heart". The Ming dynasty (1368–1644) drew its name from the same character, associating the name with a golden era of Chinese culture.

Lin

Chinese · “A Chinese given name written as 林 meaning "forest" or "grove", or 琳 meaning "beautiful jade". The character 林 suggests abundance, shelter, and natural strength — a dense stand of trees as opposed to a single tree standing alone. 琳 (beautiful jade) is more favored for women. Lin is also a common surname in southern China and among the Chinese diaspora.

Ting

Chinese · “A Chinese given name written as 婷 meaning "graceful" or "elegant" (used almost exclusively for women), or 廷 meaning "court" or "hall" — the formal space of an imperial or official audience. The character 婷 is the standard beauty-epithet for feminine grace in Chinese, appearing in the compound 婷婷 (graceful, slender). The court meaning connects the name to official power and formal ceremony.

Ying

Chinese · “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").

Bin

Chinese · “A Chinese given name written as 彬 meaning "refined" or "elegant" (particularly the combination of literary and martial qualities), or 斌 which combines the characters for civil (文) and military (武) arts, suggesting someone accomplished in both. The compound 文质彬彬 (wenzhibin-bin), used for a person of cultured, refined bearing, is one of the most quoted phrases from the Analects of Confucius.


More Chinese names

Kai

A Chinese given name written as 凯 meaning "triumphant return" or "victory song" — the music played when armies return victorious. It is also the character in 凯旋 (kaishan, triumphal return). Kai can alternatively be written as 开 meaning "to open" or "to begin", capturing the idea of beginnings, unlocking, and inauguration. Both meanings are strongly positive and frequently given to sons.

Fang

A Chinese given name written most often as 芳 meaning "fragrant" or "virtuous" (typically feminine), or 方 meaning "square", "upright", or "direction/method" (more often masculine). The character 芳 is associated with the fragrance of flowers and, by extension, a woman of admirable virtue. In classical Chinese poetry, 芳 is a frequent metaphor for moral beauty.

Zhi

A Chinese given name written as 智 meaning "wisdom" or "intelligence", or 志 meaning "will", "aspiration", or "ambition". The character 智 is one of the five Confucian virtues (alongside benevolence, righteousness, propriety, and trustworthiness), making it a name of considerable moral and philosophical weight. 志 (will/aspiration) connects to the Chinese concept of zhizhi — the cultivation of firm intention.

Nan

A Chinese given name written as 南 meaning "south" or 楠 meaning "nanmu tree" — the fragrant hardwood used to build imperial palaces and coffins, prized for its beauty and durability. South (南) is associated in Chinese cosmology with the Vermilion Bird, the element fire, and summer — warmth, abundance, and peak vitality. The nanmu tree is a symbol of endurance and natural nobility.

Li

One of the most versatile Chinese given names, with meaning entirely determined by the character: 力 means "strength" or "power", 丽 means "beautiful" or "gorgeous", and 立 means "to stand" or "to establish". Li is also one of the most common Chinese surnames, making it a name that bridges both given-name and family-name traditions.

Peng

A Chinese given name written as 鹏 meaning "roc" — the mythical giant bird of Chinese legend that flies ninety thousand li in a single beat of its wings. The roc first appears in the Zhuangzi (庄子), the Daoist philosophical text, as a symbol of transcendent freedom and the limits of small-minded understanding. The name carries enormously positive connotations of vast ambition and soaring potential.


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