Sun-young explained
Hangul: | 선영 |
Hanja: | ,,, and others |
Mr: | Sŏn-yŏng |
Rr: | Seon-yeong |
Sun-young, also spelled Seon-young or Seon-yeong, is a Korean unisex given name, predominantly feminine. It was the ninth-most popular name for baby girls born in South Korea in 1970, and held the same rank in 1980.[1]
Hanja
The meaning of the name depends on the hanja used to write each syllable of the name. There are 41 hanja with the reading "sun" and 34 hanja with the reading "young" on the South Korean government's official list of hanja which may be registered for use in given names.[2] Ways of writing this name in hanja include:
- With the first character (착할 선 chakhal seon), meaning "good" or "kind-hearted":
- (길 영 gil yeong "long", "eternal"). These characters are also used to write the Japanese surname and masculine given name Yoshinaga.[3]
- (꽃부리 영 ggotburi yeong "flower petals"; 뛰어날 영 ddwieonal yeong "heroic"). These characters are also used to write the Japanese masculine given name Yoshihide.[3]
- (영리할 영 yeongrihal yeong "clever"). The second character is not on the South Korean government's list of name hanja.[2]
- With the first character (베풀 선 bepul seon), meaning "to proclaim":
- or (비칠 영 bichil yeong "shine")
People
People with this name include:
Entertainers
- Kim Sun-young (actress, born 1976), South Korean actress
- Park Sun-young (actress) (born 1976), South Korean actress
- Kim Sun-young (actress, born 1980), South Korean actress
- Hyomin (born Park Sun-young, 1989), South Korean female singer, member of T-ara
- Luna (South Korean singer) (born Park Sun-young, 1993), South Korean female singer, member of f(x)
- Bak Seon-yeong (voice actress), South Korean voice actress
Sportspeople
Other
See also
Notes and References
- Web site: 한국인이 가장 줗아하는 이름은 무엇일까?. babyname.co.kr. 2012-11-09.
- Web site: 인명용 한자표. Table of hanja for use in personal names. Supreme Court. South Korea. 2013-10-17.
- Book: Breen, Jim. Japanese Names Dictionary. Jim Breen. Electronic Dictionary Research and Development Group. 2011. 9 October 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20121205062302/http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~jwb/cgi-bin/wwwjdic.cgi. 5 December 2012.