Naming Glossary

Key terms and concepts from Asian naming traditions

🇰🇷 culturalpractice

Jakinyeongsa

작명영사 (作名領事) / 작명사

A professional Korean name consultant who specializes in creating auspicious names based on saju analysis, ohaeng balance, hanja selection, and traditional naming principles.

🇰🇷 culturalpractice

Goyueo Name

고유어 이름

A pure Korean name composed of native Korean words rather than Sino-Korean characters, reflecting a modern trend toward distinctly Korean linguistic identity.

🇨🇳🇹🇼🇸🇬🇲🇾 culturalpractice

Naming Taboo

名讳 (míng huì)

The traditional Chinese practice of avoiding the use of characters from the names of emperors, ancestors, and elders as a sign of respect.

🇨🇳🇹🇼🇸🇬🇲🇾 culturalpractice

Courtesy and Art Names

字号 (zì hào)

Traditional supplementary names given at adulthood (字, zì) or self-chosen as artistic pseudonyms (号, hào), reflecting maturity, ideals, or literary identity.

🇯🇵 culturalpractice

Kirakira Name

キラキラネーム

A colloquial term for unconventional Japanese names that use creative or unexpected kanji readings, often considered difficult to read or excessively unique.

🇻🇳 culturalpractice

Diacritics in Vietnamese Names

Dấu thanh trong tên

The system of tone marks and vowel diacritics in Vietnamese that are essential components of names, distinguishing entirely different words and meanings.

🇻🇳 culturalpractice

Văn and Thị

Văn / Thị

Traditional Vietnamese gender-indicating middle names where Văn (文) designates males and Thị (氏) designates females, a convention that remains common but is declining.

🇻🇳 culturalpractice

Name Taboo

Kỵ húy / Tên húy

The Vietnamese cultural practice of avoiding the use of names belonging to ancestors, elders, or revered figures, rooted in Confucian respect hierarchies.

🇮🇳 culturalpractice

Nāmakaraṇa

नामकरण

The Hindu naming ceremony, one of the sixteen saṃskāras (life-cycle rites), traditionally performed on the twelfth day after a child's birth.

🇮🇳 culturalpractice

Singh and Kaur

सिंह / कौर

Singh ('lion') and Kaur ('princess') are the universal surnames adopted by Sikh men and women respectively, instituted by Guru Gobind Singh in 1699 to abolish caste distinctions.

🇮🇳 culturalpractice

Saṃskāra

संस्कार

The system of sixteen sacred life-cycle rites in Hinduism, several of which — including prenatal rites and the naming ceremony — directly influence how a child is named.

🇬🇧 culturalpractice

Peerage Naming

Peerage Title

The British system of hereditary and life titles — Duke, Marquess, Earl, Viscount, Baron — that create a parallel naming identity distinct from a peer's birth surname.

🇬🇧 culturalpractice

Regnal Name

Regnal Name

The name a British monarch chooses to reign under, which may differ from their birth forename and is formally adopted at accession to the throne.

🇬🇧 culturalpractice

Christening Name

Christening Name

The name formally given to a child at Christian baptism in British tradition, historically the sole legal means of name registration and identical to the given name in most cases.

🇫🇷 culturalpractice

Saints' Calendar Naming

Calendrier des saints

The French tradition of giving children names from the Catholic calendar of saints, historically mandated by law and still reflected in France's tradition of celebrating name days (fêtes).

🇫🇷 culturalpractice

Breton Celtic Naming

Anvioù Brezhoneg

The naming traditions of Brittany's Celtic Breton-speaking population, featuring names from Breton mythology, Christian saints, and the Arthurian tradition, long suppressed by French naming law.

🇮🇪 culturalpractice

Ainm Baiste

Ainm Baiste

The baptismal or christening name given to an Irish Catholic child at the sacrament of baptism, historically the primary form of personal identification in parish records.

🇮🇪 culturalpractice

Gaeltacht Naming

Ainmniú sa Ghaeltacht

Naming practices specific to Irish-speaking Gaeltacht regions, where Irish-language names are used exclusively or preferentially as part of active language preservation.

🇮🇪 culturalpractice

Gaelicisation

Gaelú

The movement and process of restoring or adopting Irish-language forms of personal names that had been anglicized under British colonial administration, particularly active since the late nineteenth century.

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 culturalpractice

Scottish Regnal Naming

Ainm Rìoghail

The tradition by which Scottish monarchs chose or were designated a regal name — sometimes distinct from their baptismal name — to express dynastic continuity, legitimacy, or political alliances.

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 culturalpractice

Kirk Naming Traditions

Ainmeachadh na Eaglaise

Naming customs associated with the Church of Scotland (Kirk), including the baptismal register tradition, godparent naming conventions, and the influence of Reformed Protestant theology on name choice.

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 culturalpractice

Highland Gaelic Naming

Ainmeachadh na Gàidhealtachd

Naming conventions of the Scottish Highlands, characterized by Gaelic given names, patronymic bynames (sloinneadh), territorial associations, and the use of descriptive nicknames (fionn, dubh, ruadh) to distinguish individuals.

🇳🇴 culturalpractice

Norwegian Name Day

Navnedag

A navnedag is a calendar tradition in Norway in which specific given names are assigned to particular days of the year, and bearers of that name may celebrate their name day similarly to a birthday.

🇳🇴 culturalpractice

Norse Mythology Naming

Norrøne mytologiske navn

Norwegian naming inspired by Norse mythology draws on the names of gods, giants, and legendary figures from the Old Norse religious tradition, with names like Thor, Freya, Odin, and Sigrid remaining in use today.

🇳🇴 culturalpractice

Norwegianisation of Sami Names

Fornorsking av samiske navn

Norwegianisation (fornorsking) refers to the systematic colonial-era policies that pressured and sometimes forced indigenous Sami and Kven people to adopt Norwegian names, suppressing indigenous naming traditions from the mid-19th century through much of the 20th century.

🇸🇪 culturalpractice

Swedish Name Day

Namnsdag

The Swedish namnsdag is a calendar tradition in which specific first names are assigned to each day of the year, and bearers of those names may celebrate their name day. The Swedish name-day calendar is formally maintained by the Swedish Academy.

🇸🇪 culturalpractice

Swedish Baptismal Name

Dopnamn

A dopnamn is the given name received at baptism in the Swedish Lutheran tradition. Historically, it was the primary legal identifier of a person, and baptismal records kept by the Church of Sweden were the main source of civil registration until 1991.

🇸🇪 culturalpractice

Swedish Peasant Naming Traditions

Allmogenamn / Allmogens namnbruk

Allmogenamn refers to the naming customs of Swedish common people (allmoge) — the rural farming population — before the adoption of fixed hereditary surnames, characterised by patronymics, farm names, and descriptive bynames.

🇩🇰 culturalpractice

Navnedag

navnedag

The Danish name day (navnedag), a calendar tradition in which each day of the year is assigned one or more personal names, and individuals celebrate their navnedag as a personal occasion akin to a secondary birthday.

🇩🇰 culturalpractice

Danish Royal Naming Traditions

Kongelige navnetraditioner

The naming conventions of the Danish royal house, characterised by a rotating set of dynastic names drawn from Norse, German, and Christian traditions, reflecting Denmark's historical alliances and the continuity of the monarchy.

🇩🇰 culturalpractice

Døbenavn

døbenavn

The Danish baptismal name (døbenavn), the given name formally bestowed upon a child during the Lutheran church christening ceremony, which historically was the primary means of name registration in Denmark.

🇫🇮 culturalpractice

Nimipäivä

nimipäivä

The Finnish name day (nimipäivä), a calendar tradition in which nearly every day of the year is assigned one or more Finnish names, celebrated as a personal occasion by Finns bearing those names.

🇫🇮 culturalpractice

Finnish Nature-Based Names

luontonimistö

The Finnish tradition of deriving given names and surnames from natural elements — forests, waters, landscapes, plants, and animals — reflecting the deep cultural connection between Finnish identity and the natural environment.

🇫🇮 culturalpractice

Suomalaistaminen

suomalaistaminen

The Finnish-language movement to replace Swedish-language personal names with Finnish equivalents, particularly surnames, which was especially intense during the late 19th and early 20th centuries as part of Finnish national awakening.

🇫🇮 culturalpractice

Kalevala Naming

Kalevala-nimet

The Finnish tradition of drawing personal names from characters and concepts in the Kalevala, Finland's national epic compiled by Elias Lönnrot in 1835–1849, including names such as Väinö, Aino, Ilmari, and Tapio.