Character Name
Min-seo
Min-seo Min-seo (敏書, quick-witted scholar) names a character for the combination of quick intelligence and bookish depth — someone who reads voraciously and processes what they read at speed, whose conversations are dense with allusion and unexpected connection. In contemporary Korean literary fiction, the intellectually intense young woman who cannot quite fit into the social containers constructed for her is a significant figure, and Min-seo suits this archetype while resisting its more reductive versions.
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Famous characters named Min-seo
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Related names
Jun-seo
Korean · “A Korean given name combining jun (준) and seo (서). Jun is written as 俊 (talented, handsome) or 峻 (lofty, towering). Seo is written as 書 (book, writing, calligraphy) or 瑞 (auspicious omen). Jun-seo thus suggests "a scholar of exceptional talent" or "one whose lofty nature is auspicious" — a name that fuses intellectual excellence with natural scholarly inclination.”
Seo-yeon
Korean · “A Korean given name combining seo (서) and yeon (연). Seo is written as 書 (writing/calligraphy) or 瑞 (auspicious omen). Yeon is written as 娟 (graceful, beautiful) or 蓮 (lotus — the same Buddhist symbol as Japanese Ren). Seo-yeon thus suggests "auspiciously graceful" or "the lotus of scholarship". Seo-yeon is consistently among the most popular girls' names in South Korea.”
Eun-ji
Korean · “A Korean given name combining eun (은) and ji (지). Eun is written as 恩 (grace, favor) or 銀 (silver). Ji is written as 智 (wisdom) or 知 (knowledge). Eun-ji thus suggests "graceful wisdom" or "the silver of knowledge". The pairing of grace/favor (恩) with wisdom (智) creates a character defined by beneficent intelligence — a quality of wisdom that is fundamentally oriented toward others' good. Eun-ji is predominantly feminine.”
Bo-ram
Korean · “A Korean given name written purely in the native Korean language (고유어 / goyueo) rather than hanja — it means "worthwhile", "rewarding", or "meaningful". Bo-ram is one of the few Korean given names that is not Sino-Korean in origin, making it distinctively Korean in character. The meaning of "something that is worth doing, worth having" is expressed without recourse to Chinese characters, giving it an earthy, warm quality.”
Jae-hyun
Korean · “A Korean given name combining jae (재) and hyun (현). Jae is written as 才 (talent, gift — same as Chinese Cai 才) or 在 (to be present, to exist). Hyun is written as 賢 (virtuous/worthy) or 炫 (brilliant). Jae-hyun thus suggests "talented and virtuous" or "brilliantly present" — a name that combines innate gifts with moral cultivation, the classic ideal of the complete person in Confucian ethics.”
More Korean names
Bo-ram
“A Korean given name written purely in the native Korean language (고유어 / goyueo) rather than hanja — it means "worthwhile", "rewarding", or "meaningful". Bo-ram is one of the few Korean given names that is not Sino-Korean in origin, making it distinctively Korean in character. The meaning of "something that is worth doing, worth having" is expressed without recourse to Chinese characters, giving it an earthy, warm quality.”
Hyun-woo
“A Korean given name combining hyun (현) and woo (우). Hyun is written as 賢 (virtuous/worthy) or 炫 (brilliant, shining). Woo is written as 宇 (universe) or 祐 (divine protection). Hyun-woo thus suggests "virtuous as the universe" or "brilliant under heaven's protection" — a name of considerable cosmic and moral aspiration, similar in structure to Hyeon-woo but with slightly different register.”
Da-eun
“A Korean given name combining da (다) and eun (은). Da is written as 多 (many, much, abundant) or with the pure Korean particle da (다) meaning "everything" or "all". Eun is written as 恩 (grace/favor) or 銀 (silver). Da-eun thus suggests "abundant grace" or "all-encompassing favor" — a name of generous, overflowing beneficence. Da-eun is predominantly feminine and belongs to the more recent generation of Korean naming conventions.”
Ji-woo
“A Korean given name combining ji (지) and woo (우). Ji is written as 智 (wisdom) or 志 (will/aspiration); woo as 宇 (universe/space) or 雨 (rain). Ji-woo thus suggests "wise as the universe" or "wisdom that nourishes like rain". Woo (宇) is particularly evocative, carrying the same cosmic scale as the Chinese yu (宇) — a mind or character as vast as the sky.”
Jun-seo
“A Korean given name combining jun (준) and seo (서). Jun is written as 俊 (talented, handsome) or 峻 (lofty, towering). Seo is written as 書 (book, writing, calligraphy) or 瑞 (auspicious omen). Jun-seo thus suggests "a scholar of exceptional talent" or "one whose lofty nature is auspicious" — a name that fuses intellectual excellence with natural scholarly inclination.”
Min-jun
“A Korean given name combining min (민) and jun (준). Min is most commonly written with the hanja 敏 (quick-witted, alert, intelligent) or 珉 (jade-like stone). Jun is written as 俊 (talented, handsome) or 準 (standard, model). Together, Min-jun suggests quick brilliance or an alert, talented person. Min-jun has been among South Korea's most popular boys' names for many years running.”
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