Ruan (surname) explained

Ruan
Pronunciation:Ruǎn (Pinyin)
Oán or Ńg (Pe̍h-ōe-jī)
Language:Chinese, Vietnamese
Language origin:Old Chinese
Variant:Ruan, Juan (Mandarin)
Un, Yuen (Cantonese)
Wan, Wee, Ng, Guan (Hokkien)
Nguang (Teochew)
Nguang (Hokchew)
완/롼, 원 (Korean)
げん, グエン (Japanese)
Nguyễn (Vietnamese)
Derivative:Nguyễn

Ruan (; Pinyin: Ruǎn; Wade-Giles: Juan, pronounced as /cmn/) is a Chinese surname.

The Taiwanese Hokkien version pronounced as /nan-TW/ or pronounced as /nan-TW/ is transcribed Oán and Ńg in Pe̍h-ōe-jī. The Cantonese version pronounced as /yue/ is romanized Jyun2 in the Jyutping system or Yún in the Yale system, or more commonly Yuen or Un (the latter is typical in Macau). In Hokchew Chinese, it is Nguang.

Its Vietnamese equivalent is Nguyễn (pronounced pronounced as /vi/ in Northern Vietnamese and pronounced as /vi/ in Southern Vietnamese), and is the most common Vietnamese family name.

Notable people named Ruan

See also