Naming Guides
In-depth articles about naming traditions across Asian cultures
How Korean Names Work
Hanja, Generational Characters, and Family Names
Korean names follow a three-syllable structure rooted in Confucian philosophy, with each character carefully chosen for meaning and the generational dollimja system linking families across centuries.
Chinese Naming Conventions
Characters, Tones, and Family Traditions
Chinese names combine carefully chosen characters for meaning, tone, and five-element balance, with some families linking generations through shared characters from an ancestral naming poem.
Japanese Names
Kanji, Hiragana, and the Art of Name Selection
Japanese names are celebrated for their diversity and creative freedom, with parents choosing from thousands of approved kanji and assigning their own readings — making Japan's naming system one of the most expressive in the world.
Vietnamese Names
Family Heritage and Middle Name Traditions
Vietnamese names feature a distinctive three-part structure where the given name — not the family name — is used in address, and the middle name carries important semantic and historically gendered meaning.
Indian Naming Systems
Regional, Religious, and Linguistic Diversity
Indian naming encompasses a remarkable diversity of regional, religious, and linguistic systems, from the patronymic traditions of South India to the astrologically guided namkaran ceremonies of Hindu families across the subcontinent.
Understanding Asian Naming Traditions
A Comparative Overview
Asian naming traditions share a commitment to meaning, cosmology, and family identity, but differ significantly in structure, writing systems, and the roles played by surname versus given name.
How British Names Work
Anglo-Saxon Roots, Norman Influence, and Modern Traditions
British names evolved from Anglo-Saxon single names to hereditary surnames after the Norman Conquest of 1066, drawing on patronymics, occupations, and landscape to form a system that still shapes naming across the British Isles today.
How French Names Work
Prénoms, Noms de Famille, and the Napoleonic Legacy
French naming is shaped by the Napoleonic 1803 law that restricted prénoms to saints and historical figures for nearly two centuries, and by the 1993 liberalization that opened the registry to creative and regional names for the first time.
How Irish Names Work
Gaelic Origins, O and Mac Prefixes
Irish names are built on a Gaelic foundation of O and Mac prefixes connecting bearers to medieval ancestors, with given names drawn from Old Irish mythology and a grammatical gender system that creates distinct feminine surname forms.
How Scottish Names Work
Clan Names, Mac Prefixes, and Highland Traditions
Scottish names are defined by the Highland clan system and the Mac prefix connecting bearers to named ancestors, alongside a Lowland tradition of -son patronymics and occupational surnames, with Gaelic given names undergoing a contemporary revival.
How Norwegian Names Work
Patronymics, Farm Names, and the -sen Tradition
Norwegian names evolved from a generational patronymic system — where surnames changed every generation and women used -datter forms — to fixed hereditary surnames mandated in 1923, with most families adopting their current patronymic or farm name as their permanent family name.
How Swedish Names Work
Patronymics, Nature Names, and the -sson Tradition
Swedish surnames are dominated by the -sson patronymic tradition, with Johansson, Andersson, and Karlsson among the most common, alongside a distinctive class of nature-word surnames originating from the 17th-century military conscription system.
How Danish Names Work
Patronymics, Middle Names, and the -sen Tradition
Danish names are dominated by -sen patronymics frozen into hereditary surnames in 1904, producing a surname landscape where ten names cover 45 percent of the population, making middle names practically essential for individual identification in Danish society.
How Finnish Names Work
Name Days, Dual Names, and Finnish-Swedish Traditions
Finnish names combine a unique name day calendar tradition, the dual Finnish-Swedish linguistic heritage of Finland's bilingual society, and the legacy of the Fennicization movement that systematically converted Swedish surnames to Finnish forms in the early 20th century.