For the Minnan Chinese surname written
常, see
Chang (surname), its spelling in Mandarin Pinyin. For the Korean surname spelled Sŭng in the McCune–Reischauer romanisation system, see
Seung (Korean name), its spelling in Revised Romanization.
Seong (Korean: 성), also spelled Song or Sung, is an uncommon Korean family name, a single-syllable Korean given name, as well as a common element in two-syllable Korean given names. The meaning differs based on the hanja used to write it.
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The family name Seong is written with only one hanja, meaning "succeed" or "accomplish" (成). The 2000 South Korean Census found 167,903 people with this family name, up by six percent from 158,385 in the 1985 census. This increase was far smaller than the fifteen percent growth in the overall South Korean population over the same period.[1] They traced their origins to only a single bon-gwan, Changnyeong County.[2] This was also the place where they formed the highest concentration of the local population, with 2,360 people (3.61%).[1]
In a study by the National Institute of the Korean Language based on 2007 application data for South Korean passports, it was found that 67.4% of people with this surname spelled it in Latin letters as Sung in their passports. The Revised Romanisation spelling Seong was in second place at 29.4%. Rarer alternative spellings (the remaining 3.2%) included Seung, Shung, and the Yale Romanisation spelling Seng.[3]
Government and politics
- Seong Sam-mun (1418–1456), Joseon Dynasty official
- Seong Seung (died 1456), Joseon Dynasty official
- Seong Huian (1461–1513), Joseon Dynasty official
- Seong Hon (1535–1598), Joseon Dynasty official
- Ui-bin Seong (1753–1786), Joseon Dynasty concubine
- Sung Jusik (1891–1956), Korean independence activist, later a North Korean politician
- Seong Hye-rang (born 1935), North Korean defector
- Sung Yun-mo (born 1963), South Korean politician
- Sung Jae-gi (1967–2013), South Korean activist
Sport
- Sung Nak-woon (1923–1986), South Korean football forward
- Seong Nak-gun (born 1962), South Korean sprinter
- Sung Han-kook (born 1963), South Korean badminton player
- Sung Jung-a (born 1965), South Korean basketball player
- Sung Kyung-hwa (born 1965), South Korean handball player
- Sung Hee-jun (born 1974), South Korean long jumper
- Sung Han-soo (born 1976), South Korean football forward (K League 1)
- Sung Jong-hyun (born 1979), South Korean football defender (K League 1, China League One)
- Sung Kyung-mo (born 1980), South Korean football goalkeeper (K League 1)
- Sung Min (swimmer) (born 1982), South Korean swimmer
- Sung Hyun-ah (footballer) (born 1982), South Korean football forward
- Seong Kyung-il (born 1983), South Korean football goalkeeper (K League 1)
- Sung Si-bak (born 1987), South Korean short track speed skater
- Seong Se-hyeon (born 1990), South Korean curler
- Sung Ji-hyun (born 1991), South Korean badminton player
- Sung Eun-ryung (born 1992), South Korean luger
- Seong Eun-jeong (born 1999), South Korean professional golfer
- Sung Nak-so, South Korean table tennis player
Other
- Seong Baek-in (born 1933), South Korean Tungusologist
- Dan Keun Sung (born 1952), South Korean electronic engineer
- Wonyong Sung (born c. 1954), South Korean professor of electronic and information engineering
- Jung Mo Sung (born 1957), South Korean-born Brazilian theologian
- Doris Sung (born 1964), American educator of Korean descent
- Seung-Yong Seong (born 1965), South Korean immunologist
- Kiwan Sung (born 1967), South Korean poet
- Hugh Sung (born 1968), American classical pianist of Korean descent
- Shi-Yeon Sung (born 1975), South Korean classical conductor
- Steve Sung (born 1985), South Korean poker player
- Mikyung Sung (born 1993), South Korean double bass player
- Lea Seong, South Korean fashion designer
Fictional characters
- Seong Chun-hyang, the title character of the folk tale Chunhyangjeon
- Seong Mi-na, in Japanese fighting game series Soul Caliber
- Sung Jinwoo, protagonist of the South Korean light novel and manhwa, Solo Leveling
- Seong Gi-hun, the main character of the television series Squid Game
- Seong Taehoon, the main supporting character of the manhwa How To Fight
Hanja
As of December 2018[update], regulations of the Supreme Court of Korea permit the following 24 hanja with the reading Seong, plus six variant forms, to be registered for use in given names.[4]
Ten characters from the table of basic hanja for educational use:
- 姓 (성씨 성; seongssi seong): "family name"
- 性 (성품 성; seongpum seong): "character", "personality"
- 成 (이룰 성; irul seong): "accomplish"
- 城 (재 성; jae seong): "castle"
- 誠 (정성 성; jeongseong seong): "sincere"
- 盛 (성할 성; seonghal seong): "abundant"
- 省 (살필 성; salpil seong): "to observe"
- 聖 (성인 성; seong-in seong): "sage"
- 聲 (소리 성; sori seong): "voice"
- 星 (별 성; byeol seong): "star"
Fourteen characters from the table of additional hanja for name use:
- 珹 (옥 이름 성; ok ireum seong): name of a kind of jade
- 娍 (아름다울 성; areumdaul seong): "beautiful"
- 瑆 (옥빛 성; okbit seong): "brightness of jade"
- 惺 (깨달을 성; ggaedareul seong): "to realise"
- 醒 (깰 성; ggael seong): "to awaken"
- 宬 (서고 성; seogo seong): "library"
- 猩 (성성이 성; seongseong-i seong): "orangutan"
- 筬 (바디 성; badi seong): "reed"
- 腥 (비릴 성; biril seong): "rotting meat"
- 貹 (재물 성; jaemul seong): "property", "valuables"
- 胜 (비릴 성; biril seong): "victory"
- 晟 (밝을 성; balgeul seong): "bright"
- 𦖤: "sharp hearing"[d]
- 騂 (붉은말 성; bulgeun mal seong): "red horse"
People
People with the monosyllabic given name Seong include:
As name element
Many names starting with this element have been popular names for newborn baby boys in earlier decades, according to South Korean government data:[5][6]
Other names containing beginning with this element include:
Other names ending with this element include:
This variant uses 丁 in place of the hook stroke used in the standard form.
This is officially listed as a separate character in Schedule 1 of the regulations, rather than a variant form in Schedule 2 of the regulations.
This variant form is not yet encoded in Unicode.
"성씨인구분포데이터" [Family name population and distribution data]. South Korea: National Statistics Office. Archived from the original on 2013-11-01. Retrieved 2013-05-28.
성씨 로마자 표기 방안: 마련을 위한 토론회 [Plan for romanisation of surnames: a preparatory discussion]. National Institute of the Korean Language. 25 June 2009. p. 59. Retrieved 22 October 2015.
가족관계의 등록 등에 관한 규칙 [Regulations on Registration of Family Relations] (Regulation 2954) (in Korean). 29 January 2021.