Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Lei

Meaning — A Chinese given name most commonly written as 雷 meaning "thunder", evoking power, sudden force, and the voice of heaven. It can also be written as 磊 meaning "pile of stones" and by extension "open and upright in character". Thunder (雷) is associated in Chinese cosmology with the Dragon of the East and with spring rains that bring life after winter.·Chinese origin·Gender-Neutral·lay (even stress)

Lei Lei written as 雷 (thunder) carries an immediate forcefulness — a name for characters who arrive with presence, whose actions and emotions have an amplified quality. The thunder association in Chinese folklore connects the name to justice and warning: the divine thunder punishes evil and announces transformation. A character named Lei is rarely a passive bystander; they tend to be the force that breaks a stalemate open.

Best genres for Lei

WuxiaHistorical FictionAdventureLiterary FictionFantasy

Famous characters named Lei

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


Variations & nicknames

LeiLéi

Pairs well with

Lei ChenLei LiuLei ZhangLei WangLei LiLei HuangLei WuLei Lin

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Related names

Hao

Chinese · “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.

Hua

Chinese · “A Chinese given name written as 花 meaning "flower" or 华 meaning "magnificent", "splendid", or "Chinese" (as in 中华, Zhonghua, the name for China itself). The character 华 carries the full weight of Chinese civilization — it is used in the formal name for China and signifies the pinnacle of cultural refinement. Hua Mulan (花木兰) is the most celebrated literary bearer of the flower character.

Sheng

Chinese · “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.

Chao

Chinese · “A Chinese given name written as 超 meaning "to surpass" or "to transcend", or 朝 meaning "dynasty", "morning", or "court". The character 超 appears in words meaning to exceed, go beyond, or outstrip — a name expressing the hope that a child will surpass all expectations. 朝 (dynasty/morning/court) gives the name a grander, more ceremonial quality.

Gang

Chinese · “A Chinese given name written as 刚 meaning "strong", "firm", or "unyielding" — specifically the hardness of metal or character that refuses to bend. It can also be written as 钢 meaning "steel", making the association with toughness entirely literal. Gang is an emphatically masculine name in Chinese culture, expressing the wish that a son will be hard, strong, and unyielding in the face of adversity.


More Chinese names

Song

A Chinese given name written as 松 meaning "pine tree" — another of the classical emblems of Chinese virtue, representing longevity, perseverance, and integrity in adversity (the pine stays green through winter). Alternatively 颂 meaning "to praise" or "hymn". The Song dynasty (宋, 960–1279) was one of China's greatest eras of art, poetry, and philosophy, and the name carries that cultural brilliance.

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.

An

A Chinese given name written as 安 meaning "peace", "calm", or "safety". The character 安 is composed of a woman (女) under a roof (宀), the original image suggesting the safety of home — it is one of the most fundamental Chinese wish-words, appearing in greetings, farewells, and aspirations for good fortune. An is also used in Vietnamese as a given name with similar peaceful associations.

Yu

A Chinese given name with exceptionally wide possible characters: 宇 means "universe" or "eaves of a building" (and by extension the space between heaven and earth), 玉 means "jade", and 裕 means "abundant" or "prosperous". Jade (玉) is perhaps the most culturally significant material in Chinese civilization, associated with virtue, purity, nobility, and the five cardinal virtues of Confucianism. It is used for both men and women.

Lian

A Chinese given name written as 莲 meaning "lotus flower" or 廉 meaning "honest", "incorruptible", or "frugal". The lotus (莲) is one of the most symbolically rich flowers in Chinese and Buddhist culture: it grows in muddy water but produces an immaculate flower, representing purity emerging from a corrupt world. 廉 (incorruptible) is a name associated with the honest official, a Confucian ideal.

Tao

A Chinese given name most commonly written as 涛 meaning "large waves" or "roaring surf", or — most philosophically — as 道 (Tao/Dao) meaning "the Way", the foundational concept of Daoism. As a given name, 涛 (waves) is the more common written form, suggesting power and natural force. The Daoist concept of Tao (道) as "the way" encompasses the ordering principle of the universe.


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