vcczar Posted May 4 Share Posted May 4 Daniel Jang Margaret Wie Steve Smith Liz Park Steven Nam Jen Wie Eric Shin Jess Nam Andrew Park Jennifer Park Daniel Kim Erica Park Steven Park Christine Young Ethan Choi Christine Wie Andy Lee Christine Smith Ricky Yeun Erica Johnson Richard Oh Erica Jung Michael Park Jen Choi Steve Lee Liz Park Andy Shin Jessica Jang Steven Lee Erica Park Richard Johnson Erica Kim Eric Smith Erica Yeun Andy Wie Christine Choi Richard Choi Margaret Choi Ethan Choi Christine Choi Michael Jung Jen Park Steve Kang Sandra Kang Steve Johnson Jennifer Lee 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ConservativeElector2 Posted May 5 Share Posted May 5 @vcczar Korea has less than 300 surnames and most of them are uncommon, but here are some of the more common ones I didn't see in your list above. For each of them I probably know a friend, politician or celebrity. Some of them are just other romanization variants of already mentioned surnames. I could list many first names as well. Traditionally Korean first names contain of two syllables. As there are no real standards for writing your name with Western letters, you might see at least four different possibilities for one first name e.g. Seulgi, Seul-gi, Seul-Gi or Seul Gi. So when I come up with first names, it's up to you to include these names with or without a space or - List of surnames: Rhee, Yi (both are the same as Lee in Korean) Lim, Im Jeong, Cheong Pak (same as Park, even more correct tbh, because the Korean name contains no 'r' here) Baek, Baik, Paik (all the same in Korean) Yang Roh (could more rarely be seen as 'No') Yoon Moon Cho, Jo Yoo Kwon Ahn Song Son Kyoung Seo Heo Hwang 1 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
vcczar Posted May 5 Author Share Posted May 5 1 hour ago, ConservativeElector2 said: @vcczar Korea has less than 300 surnames and most of them are uncommon, but here are some of the more common ones I didn't see in your list above. For each of them I probably know a friend, politician or celebrity. Some of them are just other romanization variants of already mentioned surnames. I could list many first names as well. Traditionally Korean first names contain of two syllables. As there are no real standards for writing your name with Western letters, you might see at least four different possibilities for one first name e.g. Seulgi, Seul-gi, Seul-Gi or Seul Gi. So when I come up with first names, it's up to you to include these names with or without a space or - List of surnames: Rhee, Yi (both are the same as Lee in Korean) Lim, Im Jeong, Cheong Pak (same as Park, even more correct tbh, because the Korean name contains no 'r' here) Baek, Baik, Paik (all the same in Korean) Yang Roh (could more rarely be seen as 'No') Yoon Moon Cho, Jo Yoo Kwon Ahn Song Son Kyoung Seo Heo Hwang Ok, I've added almost all of these. I didn't add the variants of Park and Lee because I am yet to see a Korean-American that has not converted to Park and Lee. Thanks! 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Euri Posted May 6 Share Posted May 6 41 minutes ago, vcczar said: Ok, I've added almost all of these. I didn't add the variants of Park and Lee because I am yet to see a Korean-American that has not converted to Park and Lee. Thanks! Syngman Rhee is an example 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ConservativeElector2 Posted May 6 Share Posted May 6 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BJay_Pak Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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