bajem wrote:I see. Thanks for explaining
. But how come, Korean names have equal names in English?
I don't think that have.
Unless the Korean name is an English name written in Korean or a name from the bible.
Sometimes a Korean name coincidentally sounds similar to an English name.
My uncle's name is Jae-Seung so his English name is Jason (but it's not the same).
I know some Korean w/ names from the bible like Esther, Yo-Han (this sounds like the German pronounciation of John which is "Johann"), etc.
There are some Korean that have a traditional Korean name and a biblical name like e.g. David but the names are not related in any way. And some Koreans (most of all if they were born in the West) have a Western given name like Felix etc.
Like Alexis explained, normally if they have another Korean name it's just a second given name or middle name that has nothing to do w/ the Western name.
anyways, you could do it like me and just choose your own Korean name haha. My real name is Claudia.