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  1. People with the single-syllable given name Min include: Geum Min (born 1962), South Korean politician Namkoong Min (born 1978), South Korean film and television actor Kang Min (born 1982), South Korean professional StarCraft player Sung Min (swimmer)

  2. The Korean family name Min is written with only one hanja ( 閔 ). The 2000 census found 142,752 people in 43,887 households belonging to this clan (about 0.35% of the South Korean population at the time), making it the 47th-most-common surname among the 286 surnames listed in the census. [1]

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  4. This is a list of Korean given names by type. Most Korean given names consist of two Sino-Korean morphemes each written with one hanja. There are also names with more than two syllables, often from native Korean vocabulary. Finally, there are a small number of one-syllable names.

    First Syllable → Second Syllable ↓
    Gyeong 경 ( 景 敬 慶 卿 經)
    Gwang 광 ( 光 廣)
    Seok /Suk (석)
    Seon /Sun (선)
    Soo /Su (수)
  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Korean_nameKorean name - Wikipedia

    • Terms
    • Surnames
    • Given Names
    • Usage
    • Romanization and Pronunciation
    • History
    • See Also
    • References
    • External Links

    A number of terms exist for Korean names. For the full name, seongmyeong (성명; 姓名) is commonly used. This is a compound word; seong (성; 姓) refers to the surname, and myeong (명; 名) to the given name. The native Korean term ireum (이름) can be used to refer to either the full name or the given name. A more formal term for the full name is seongham (성함; ...

    Fewer than 300 (approximately 280) Korean surnames were in use in 2000, and the three most common (Kim, Lee, and Park) account for nearly half of the population. For various reasons,[clarification needed]the number of Korean surnames has been increasing over time. Each Korean person belongs to a Korean clan. Each clan can be identified by a surname...

    Traditionally, given names are partly determined by generation names, a custom originating in China. One of the two characters in a given name is unique to the individual, while the other is shared by all people in a family generation. In both North and South Koreas, generational names are usually no longer shared by cousins, but are still commonly...

    Forms of address

    The usage of names is governed by strict norms in traditional Korean society. It is generally considered rude to address people by their given names in Korean culture. This is particularly the case when dealing with adults or one's elders. It is acceptable to call someone by his or her given name if he or she is the same age as the speaker. However, it is considered rude to use someone's given name if that person's age is a year older than the speaker. This is often a source of pragmaticdiffi...

    Traditional nicknames

    Among the common people, who have suffered from high child mortality, children were often given childhood names (아명; 兒名; amyeong), to wish them long lives by avoiding notice from the messenger of death.These have become less common. After marriage, women usually lost their amyeong, and were called by a taekho (택호; 宅號), referring to their town of origin. In addition, teknonymy, or referring to parents by their children's names, is a common practice. It is most commonly used in referring to a m...

    Gender

    Korean given names' correlation to gender is complex and, by comparison to European languages, less consistent. Certain Sino-Korean syllables carry masculine connotations, others feminine, and others unisex. These connotations may vary depending on whether the character is used as the first or second character in the given name. A dollimjagenerational marker, once confined to male descendants but now sometimes used for women as well, may further complicate gender identification. Native Korean...

    Many modern Koreans romanize their names in an ad hoc manner that often attempts to approximate conventions in English orthography. This produces many Latin-spelling variations for a single name. For example, the surname 이 (李) is variously romanized as Lee, Yi, I, or Rhee. Some Koreans avoid certain spellings because of their similarity to English ...

    The use of names has evolved over time. The first recording of Korean names appeared as early as in the early Three Kingdoms period. The adoption of Chinese characters contributed to Korean names. A complex system, including courtesy names, art names, posthumous names, and childhood names, arose out of Confucian tradition. The courtesy name system ...

    Sources

    1. Lee, Hong-jik (이홍직), ed. (1983). "Ja, Courtesy Name (자)". 새國史事典 [New encyclopedia of Korean history] (in Korean). Seoul: Kyohaksa. ISBN 978-89-09-00506-7. 2. Lee, Sang-oak (이상억) (2011-09-16). 성씨의 로마자 표기 정책 마련 연구 (PDF) (Report) (in Korean). Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism. 3. Ministry of Foreign Affairs of South Korea (2014). "여권의 한글 성명, 로마자(영문 알파벳)로는 어떻게 표기하나요?"[How do I romanize my Hangul name on my passport?] (in Korean). 4. Nahm, Andrew C. (1988). Korea: Tradition and Transforma...

    Examples of Koreans who used Japanese names: by Saga Women's Junior College (in Japanese)
  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Namkoong_MinNamkoong Min - Wikipedia

    Namkoong Min (Korean: 남궁민, born March 12, 1978) is a South Korean actor, director and screenwriter. He first gained recognition with neo-noir film A Dirty Carnival (2006), and has since given notable performances in Remember (2015–2016), Beautiful Gong Shim (2016), Good Manager (2017), Hot Stove League (2019–2020), and My Dearest (2023).

  7. Min (Korean name) Min is the Mandarin pinyin and Wade–Giles romanization of the Chinese surname written 闵 in simplified Chinese and 閔 in traditional Chinese. It is romanized Man in Cantonese. Min is listed 132nd in the Song dynasty classic text Hundred Family Surnames. [1]

  8. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MinMin - Wikipedia

    Min (Korean singer) (born 1991), South Korean singer, songwriter and actress Lee Min-young. Min (treasurer), ancient Egyptian official. Min, Marquis of Jin (died 678 BC), Chinese monarch. Empress Myeongseong (1851–1895), informally Queen Min, empress of Joseon. Menes or Min (a spelling variant no longer accepted), an early Egyptian pharaoh.