Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Lin

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

Lin Lin written as 林 (forest) evokes someone who provides shelter and community — a character who is most fully themselves in the context of relationships and mutual support, like trees that become a forest together. In Dream of the Red Chamber, Lin Daiyu (林黛玉) is one of the most celebrated characters in Chinese literature, and her name carries an almost inescapable poetic weight for Chinese readers. Characters named Lin in literary fiction often carry emotional sensitivity and literary gifts.

Best genres for Lin

Literary FictionHistorical FictionFamily SagaWuxiaContemporary Fiction

Famous characters named Lin

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


Variations & nicknames

LinLín

Pairs well with

Lin ChenLin LiuLin ZhangLin WangLin LiLin HuangLin WuLin Zhao

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Related names

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.

Peng

Chinese · “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.

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").

Jian

Chinese · “A Chinese given name written as 健 meaning "healthy", "strong", or "vigorous", or 建 meaning "to build", "to establish", or "to construct". The character 建 appears in the word 建国 (founding a nation) and 建设 (construction/development), giving the name a constructive, foundational quality. 健 is more personal — the wish for a person's physical and moral robustness.

Song

Chinese · “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.


More Chinese names

Bin

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.

Wen

A Chinese given name written as 文 meaning "literature", "writing", "culture", or "civilization". The character 文 is one of the most culturally weighted in the Chinese lexicon — it encompasses the entire tradition of Chinese letters, from the classical texts to the imperial examination system. King Wen (周文王) of the Zhou dynasty was the great culture-hero after whom countless men have been named.

Xia

A Chinese given name written as 夏 meaning "summer" or "Xia" — the first dynasty of Chinese legend (夏朝, ca. 2070–1600 BCE). Summer is the season of maximum yang energy, abundance, warmth, and the height of growth. As a dynastic name, Xia connects a character to the very origins of Chinese civilization. Xia is also written as 霞 meaning "rosy clouds" or "morning/evening glow", one of the most beautiful sky phenomena.

Bo

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.

Hua

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.

Qin

A Chinese given name written as 琴 meaning "qin" — the seven-stringed zither, one of the four arts of the Chinese gentleman alongside chess (qi), calligraphy (shu), and painting (hua). The qin is the oldest and most venerated of Chinese instruments, associated with the sage Confucius himself and with the cultivation of inner virtue through music. Qin is also the name of the dynasty (秦) that first unified China.


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