Naming Guides
In-depth articles about naming traditions across Asian cultures
How to Choose a Korean Name
A Practical Guide
Choosing a Korean name involves selecting meaningful hanja characters from the approved list, checking the family's generational character, optionally consulting a name analyst for five-element balance, and testing the full name's sound and romanization.
Romanization Systems
Converting Asian Names to English
Converting Asian names to Latin script involves distinct romanization systems for each language — Korea's Revised Romanization, China's Pinyin alongside numerous dialect systems, and Japan's Hepburn — each producing different spellings for the same underlying sounds.
Naming Ceremonies Across Asian Cultures
Rituals, Timing, and Family Traditions
Asian naming ceremonies range from Korea's 100th-day baek-il celebration to the Hindu namkaran sacrament and Chinese one-month feast — each marking the child's formal entry into community life with the name as its centerpiece.
Legal Name Changes in Asian Countries
Procedures, Restrictions, and Cultural Attitudes
Legal name changes across Asia reflect each country's cultural attitudes: South Korea's courts accept astrological grounds, Japan requires strict practical justification, China processes changes through the household registration system, and India uses a gazette notification process.
Baby Naming Tips for Multicultural Families
Bridging Asian and Western Naming Traditions
Multicultural families can bridge Asian and Western naming traditions by finding phonetically accessible Asian names, registering both names formally, choosing semantically matched names across languages, or respectfully navigating grandparents' naming expectations.
Name Compatibility and Numerology in Asian Traditions
Stroke Counts, Five Elements, and Naming Harmony
East Asian name compatibility systems — five-element theory in Korean and Chinese naming, and the five-grid kakusuu stroke analysis in Japanese naming — provide systematic frameworks for evaluating a name's suitability for its bearer's destiny.
Modern British Naming Trends
From Traditional to Contemporary British Given Names
Modern British baby naming is shaped by royal births, class associations, and growing multicultural influences, with Oliver and Olivia dominating the ONS charts while double-barrelled surnames and unisex names rise across all social groups.
French Given Name Trends: 1900 to Today
A Century of Changing Tastes in French Prénoms
A century of INSEE data reveals French naming moving from rigid saint-calendar uniformity through postwar diversification and an Anglo-American wave to today's fragmented landscape of brief, classical prénoms like Louise, Gabriel, and Jade.