Naming Guides
In-depth articles about naming traditions across Asian cultures
Confucian Influence on East Asian Names
How Philosophy Shaped Naming Across Korea, China, and Japan
Confucianism shapes East Asian naming through family-first ordering, virtue-encoding characters, and elaborate name avoidance taboos rooted in filial piety — turning every name into a philosophical statement.
Generational Characters
Tracking Family Lines Through Names
Generational character systems in Korea (dollimja) and China (paihang shi) embed genealogical information directly into personal names, allowing family relationships to be read from names alone across dozens of generations.
Naming Taboos and Superstitions Across Asia
What You Must Never Name a Child
Asian naming taboos range from prohibitions on using ancestors' names to elaborate systems of unlucky stroke counts and character meanings — reflecting the belief that a name is not merely a label but a force that shapes destiny.
Names and Destiny
How Meaning Shapes Identity in Asian Cultures
Asian naming traditions treat names as active forces shaping destiny rather than mere labels — a belief encoded in Korean myeongun philosophy, Chinese mingli analysis, and the Sanskrit understanding of names as sacred mantras.
Gender Expression in Asian Names
How Naming Traditions Encode, Challenge, and Evolve
Gender in Asian names ranges from Japan's historical -ko suffix conventions to Korea's character associations, Vietnam's traditional Van/Thi middle names, and the Sikh tradition of deliberately gender-neutral given names with gendered suffixes.
Modern Trends: How Asian Naming is Changing
Globalization, Individuality, and the Future of Traditional Names
Asian naming is changing rapidly — generational character systems are declining, English names are proliferating, gender-neutral names are rising, and pure native-language names are gaining ground as alternatives to classical traditions.
Regional Naming Traditions of the British Isles
Scottish, Welsh, Irish, and English Name Patterns
The British Isles encompass four distinct naming traditions — Welsh patronymics transformed by English rule, Scottish clan Mac prefixes, Irish Gaelic O' and Ní forms, and regionally varied English surnames — each reflecting centuries of language, conquest, and cultural continuity.
Regional Naming Traditions of France
Breton, Basque, Alsatian, and Occitan Name Heritage
France's regional naming traditions — Breton Celtic, Basque isolate, Alsatian Germanic, and Occitan southern — were suppressed for nearly two centuries under the 1803 Napoleonic law and revived after the 1993 liberalization.
Irish Baby Name Trends
Popular Names and Celtic Revival
Irish baby naming today blends Gaelic names like Aoife, Saoirse, and Fiadh with internationally popular names, driven by a Celtic Revival in naming fashion and the worldwide influence of the 70-million-strong Irish diaspora.
Scottish Baby Name Trends
Popular Names and Cultural Identity
Scottish baby names reflect a distinct cultural identity, with Gaelic names like Isla, Hamish, Eilidh, and Callum maintaining consistent popularity alongside international names, driven by the Gaelic revival and Scotland's strong sense of national identity since devolution.
Norwegian Baby Name Trends
Popular Names and Nordic Naming Laws
Norwegian baby naming balances internationally popular names with a consistent Old Norse revival featuring Sigrid, Astrid, Gunnar, and Freya, all within a legal framework liberalized by the 2002 Name Act that allows substantial parental freedom in name choice.
Swedish Baby Name Trends
Popular Names and Naming Regulations
Swedish baby naming is led by internationally popular names alongside distinctly Nordic choices like Maja, Astrid, and Ebba, governed by a pragmatic Names Act that evaluates unusual names case by case, while Swedish cultural exports have made Nordic names fashionable worldwide.
Danish Baby Name Trends
Popular Names and Approved Name Lists
Danish baby naming combines internationally popular names like William, Emma, and Noah with distinctly Nordic choices like Freja, Alfred, and Alma, regulated by an approved list of 33,000 pre-approved names and shaped by a growing Old Norse revival rooted in Denmark's Viking heritage identity.
Finnish Baby Name Trends
Popular Names and Name Day Calendars
Finnish baby naming is distinctively shaped by the Kalevala epic — with Aino consistently among the most popular girls' names — and by the name day calendar maintained by the University of Helsinki, which influences parental choices and whose 2020 revision added over 800 new names reflecting Finland's changing society.