Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Lian

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

Lian Lian written as 莲 (lotus) carries one of the most beloved symbolic inheritances in Chinese culture and Buddhist thought — the lotus rises unstained from the mud, making it the perfect metaphor for spiritual purity maintained amid worldly corruption. Characters named Lian often inhabit morally compromised environments while maintaining an uncorrupted core; their challenge is to remain a lotus rather than be absorbed into the surrounding mud. The incorruptible-official meaning suits political historical fiction.

Best genres for Lian

Historical FictionLiterary FictionFamily SagaRomanceWuxia

Famous characters named Lian

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


Variations & nicknames

LianLián

Pairs well with

Lian ChenLian LiuLian ZhangLian WangLian LiLian HuangLian WuLian Lin

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Related names

Yue

Chinese · “A Chinese given name written most commonly as 月 meaning "moon", or 悦 meaning "joyful" or "pleased". The moon (月) holds a singular place in Chinese culture — the Mid-Autumn Festival is centered on it, and it is the dominant symbol in Chinese poetry of longing, reunion, and the passage of time. Li Bai's famous lines about seeing the moon and thinking of home have made 月 one of the most emotionally loaded images in the Chinese poetic tradition.

Mei

Chinese · “A Chinese given name most commonly written as 梅 meaning "plum blossom" or 美 meaning "beautiful". The plum blossom (梅) blooms in winter, before any other flower, and is one of the "Four Gentlemen" of classical Chinese painting — a symbol of perseverance, purity, and courage in adversity. The national flower of the Republic of China, it holds deep cultural significance.

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.

Bo

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.

Fu

Chinese · “A Chinese given name written as 福 meaning "good fortune", "blessing", or "happiness" — arguably the most important single-character wish in Chinese culture. The character 福 appears on red papers pasted upside-down on doors at Lunar New Year (because "upside-down" — 倒 dào — sounds like "arrived" — 到), expressing the wish that fortune has arrived. It can also be written as 甫 meaning "just now" or as a classical honorific for adult men.


More Chinese names

Chen

As a given name, Chen is most commonly written as 晨 meaning "morning" or "dawn", or 辰 referring to the fifth Earthly Branch and associated with the Dragon in the Chinese zodiac. As a surname, 陈 is one of the ten most common surnames in China. When given as a first name, Chen carries the freshness of dawn — new beginnings, clarity, and the promise of a new day.

Xue

A Chinese given name written as 雪 meaning "snow" or 学 meaning "to study" or "learning". Snow (雪) is one of the most evocative natural images in Chinese poetry — pure, transformative, silent, and brief. The learning meaning (学) connects directly to the Confucian culture of self-cultivation: learning is the path to becoming fully human. Both characters are used for women and men.

En

A Chinese given name written as 恩 meaning "grace", "favor", "kindness", or "beneficence" — specifically the kind of grace bestowed from above, from parents upon children or sovereigns upon subjects. The concept of en (恩) is central to the Chinese social order: one is bound by debts of grace and obligated to repay them. In a naming context, En expresses a parent's love as a gift to be received and reciprocated.

Yan

A Chinese given name with several possible characters: 燕 means "swallow" (the bird), associated with spring and faithful return; 颜 means "face" or "color" and by extension "countenance" or "dignity"; 妍 means "beautiful". The swallow (燕) is a cherished literary symbol in Chinese poetry — it returns every spring, nests in familiar eaves, and embodies faithful love and homecoming.

Lan

A Chinese given name written as 兰 meaning "orchid" — one of the "Four Gentlemen" of classical Chinese painting alongside plum blossom, bamboo, and chrysanthemum. The orchid represents refinement, elegance, and the noble character who flourishes in obscurity without requiring an audience. The great calligrapher Wang Xizhi wrote his famous Orchid Pavilion Preface (兰亭序) at a gathering beside orchid-lined waters.

Xian

A Chinese given name written as 贤 meaning "virtuous", "worthy", or "of good character", or 仙 meaning "immortal" or "transcendent being". The character 贤 is a Confucian virtue-word, appearing in the famous compound 贤德 (virtuous conduct) and used in formal address to mean "worthy one". 仙 (immortal) draws on the Daoist tradition of xian — cultivated beings who have transcended ordinary existence.


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