Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Seung-hyun

Meaning — A Korean given name combining seung (승) and hyun (현). Seung is written as 昇 (to rise, to ascend) or 勝 (victory, to surpass). Hyun is written as 賢 (virtuous, worthy) or 炫 (shining, brilliant). Seung-hyun thus suggests "ascending brilliance" or "victoriously virtuous" — a name with strong upward momentum, suited to a protagonist with significant ambitions.·Korean origin·Gender-Neutral·SEUNG-hyun

Seung-hyun Seung-hyun (昇賢, ascending virtue) names a character on an upward trajectory — the name carries an inbuilt aspiration toward ascent, whether in social status, moral development, or artistic achievement. In Korean narratives of success and ambition, a character named Seung-hyun may be someone whose drive to rise is both a gift and a form of blindness: the focus on ascent can obscure what is being left behind. The victorious-virtuous reading adds moral complexity to what might otherwise be simply a story of ambition.

Best genres for Seung-hyun

Contemporary FictionLiterary FictionThrillerFamily SagaHistorical Fiction

Famous characters named Seung-hyun

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


Variations & nicknames

Seung-hyunSeunghyunSeung-hyeon

Pairs well with

Seung-hyun KimSeung-hyun LeeSeung-hyun ParkSeung-hyun ChoiSeung-hyun JungSeung-hyun HanSeung-hyun YoonSeung-hyun Lim

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Related names

Tae-hyun

Korean · “A Korean given name combining tae (태) and hyun (현). Tae is written as 泰 (grand, peaceful, exalted — as in the mountain Taesan, the Chinese Mount Tai 泰山, symbol of supreme solidity) or 太 (great, extreme). Hyun is written as 賢 (virtuous) or 炫 (brilliant, shining). Tae-hyun thus suggests "grandly virtuous" or "brilliance of the highest order" — a name with a mountainous scale of aspiration.

Dong-hyun

Korean · “A Korean given name combining dong (동) and hyun (현). Dong is written as 東 (east — the same character as Chinese Dong, carrying associations of dawn and new beginnings) or 動 (movement, action). Hyun is written as 賢 (virtuous) or 炫 (brilliant). Dong-hyun thus suggests "eastern brilliance" or "active virtue" — a name that combines directionality with moral or intellectual quality.

Sang-ho

Korean · “A Korean given name combining sang (상) and ho (호). Sang is written as 相 (mutual, each other — also prime minister) or 尙 (to esteem, to value highly). Ho is written as 浩 (vast) or 昊 (vast sky — the same character as Chinese Hao with the heavenly connotation). Sang-ho thus suggests "mutually vast" or "one who esteems the great sky" — a name of generosity and mutual regard.

Mi-young

Korean · “A Korean given name combining mi (미) and young (영). Mi is written as 美 (beautiful — the same character used in the Chinese word for America, 美国) or 微 (subtle, delicate). Young is written as 英 (outstanding, heroic — same as Chinese Ying) or 永 (eternal). Mi-young thus suggests "beautiful and outstanding" or "eternally beautiful" — a name that was particularly popular for Korean women born between the 1950s and 1970s.

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

Mi-young

A Korean given name combining mi (미) and young (영). Mi is written as 美 (beautiful — the same character used in the Chinese word for America, 美国) or 微 (subtle, delicate). Young is written as 英 (outstanding, heroic — same as Chinese Ying) or 永 (eternal). Mi-young thus suggests "beautiful and outstanding" or "eternally beautiful" — a name that was particularly popular for Korean women born between the 1950s and 1970s.

Chan-woo

A Korean given name combining chan (찬) and woo (우). Chan is written as 讚 (to praise, to acclaim) or 燦 (brilliant, resplendent — as of stars or bright light). Woo is written as 宇 (universe) or 佑 (to assist, divine assistance). Chan-woo thus suggests "resplendent as the universe" or "brilliance that praises the sky" — a name of vivid, assertive luminosity.

Hyo-jin

A Korean given name combining hyo (효) and jin (진). Hyo is written as 孝 (filial piety — the same Confucian virtue as Japanese Takashi's ko) — devotion to parents and ancestors. Jin is written as 珍 (precious, treasure) or 眞 (true, genuine). Hyo-jin thus suggests "precious filial virtue" or "truly filial" — a name that places the Confucian virtue of family devotion at the center of a character's identity.

Myung-soo

A Korean given name combining myung (명) and soo (수). Myung is written as 明 (bright, luminous — the same as Chinese Ming) or 命 (destiny, fate, life). Soo is written as 洙 (a river tributary, rippling water) or 秀 (elegant, excellent). Myung-soo thus suggests "brilliantly excellent" or "destined for rippling grace" — the Ming-brightness meaning echoing the great dynasty of Chinese history.

Yu-na

A Korean given name combining yu (유) and na (나). Yu is written as 有 (to have, to possess) or 侑 (to assist, to urge). Na is written as 娜 (graceful, elegant) or 那 (used phonetically). Yu-na thus suggests "gracefully possessing" or "elegantly gifted". Yu-na is most internationally recognized as the name of Kim Yu-na (김연아), the Olympic figure skating champion whose career brought Korean athletics to world attention.

Seon-woo

A Korean given name combining seon (선) and woo (우). Seon is written as 善 (goodness, moral excellence — the fundamental concept of human goodness in Confucian and Mencian thought) or 仙 (immortal/transcendent — the Daoist xian). Woo is written as 宇 (universe) or 佑 (divine assistance). Seon-woo thus suggests "good as the universe is vast" or "a transcendent one who receives divine blessing" — a name of extraordinary philosophical scope.


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