Certificate of Name
Qing
Feminine
Chinese
Meaning & Origin
Qing is a Chinese unisex given name (more commonly feminine) written with the character 青 (qīng) meaning “blue, green, young,” among other characters pronounced similarly (qīng in Mandarin). The name evokes freshness, youth, and the vibrancy of natural colors.Cultural SignificanceThe character 青 appears in words like qīngnián (青年, “youth”) and qīngsè (青色, “bluish-green”), connecting the name to concepts of vitality and natural beauty. As a given name, Qing gained additional resonance from the Qing dynasty (1644 – 1912), the last imperial dynasty of China, founded by the Manchu Aisin Gioro clan. The dynasty’s name itself is written with the character 清 (qīng) meaning “clear, pure,” which is different from 青 but homophonous. This correspondence created a subtle link: children named Qing in this era might have been inspired by the dynasty’s prestige and its connotations of purity and clarity.Notable BearersQing (known as Yan Yunling) – Hongmu's granddaughter, a daughter of the Qing dynasty.Gōng Qing – 20th-century Chinese poet and translator.Related FormsThe Vietnamese cognate is Thanh, which uses the Sino-Vietnamese reading thanh for 青. In Japanese, the on'yomi reading yields Kiyo and its derivative Kiyoshi “pure, bright,” sharing semantic overlap with Qing’s “youth, freshness.”GlossaryMeaning: blue, green, youngOrigin: ChineseType: unisex (mostly female)Usage regions: East Asia (China, Vietnam, Japan via borrowings)
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