Jade-green crane feather; evokes elegance, longevity, and the iridescent sheen of noble birds.
Cui: green (wood); He: crane feather (feather radical 'miao', associated with air/sky, but wood-dominant via crane’s forest habitat and bamboo symbolism).
Wood (木)
Element Energy
This name carries strong Wood energy. It is particularly suitable for individuals whose BaZi (Four Pillars) chart benefits from this element, helping to restore balance and harmony.
He (crane feather) is exceptionally rare in names; appears in Song dynasty ornithological texts and Daoist immortality iconography.
Lin Bu’s 'Crane Pond': 'A single feather falls — jade-green, weightless — carrying heaven’s silence.'
Uniquely graceful and symbolic; ideal for artists, dancers, or healers — transcends gender through avian nobility.
Yǔn Gōng
Genuinely respectful—denoting sincere reverence, humility before virtue, and courteous wisdom.
Bǐng Wén
Holding literary virtue—symbolizing wisdom embodied in culture, scholarship, and civilizing grace.
Jìng Zhī
Reverent and principled—denoting deep respect for virtue, elders, knowledge, and the moral order.
Wéi Xīn
Sustaining renewal—signifying wisdom that preserves core virtue while embracing progressive moral insight and reform.
Huái Rén
Embracing humanity—denoting compassionate wisdom, benevolent leadership, and universal moral concern.
Sōng Tāo
Pine and billowing waves—embodying endurance, dignity, and dynamic natural force.