An alliterative pair of jade-chime characters: 'Qiāng' and 'Cōng' both denote pure, layered jade tones — symbolizing harmony, sincerity, and resonant virtue.
'Qiāng' (瑲): high-clear jade tone; 'Cōng' (瑽): lower-resonant jade tone — complementary virtues in balance.
Metal (金)
Element Energy
This name carries strong Metal energy. It is particularly suitable for individuals whose BaZi (Four Pillars) chart benefits from this element, helping to restore balance and harmony.
Rare poetic doubling used in Qing dynasty literati poetry to evoke moral consonance — like two perfectly tuned jade bells sounding as one.
From Yuan Mei’s 'Garden of Pure Sounds': 'Qiāng cōng liǎng yù xiāng yìng, dé yīn zì wú jiān' (Qiāng and Cong jades answer each other — virtue’s tone knows no barrier).
Musical and memorable; excellent for performers, mediators, or diplomats.
Cún Chéng
Preserving sincerity—emphasizing constant vigilance over inner truth, authenticity, and moral consistency.
Jūn Yuè
Weighty mountain—implying gravity, reliability, and majestic, unshakeable strength.
Kǎi Fēng
Armored edge — signifying invincible courage, sharp resolve, and battle-tested strength.
Shuò Chén
Brilliant sovereign — evokes luminous authority, refined power, and celestial nobility.
Zhù Kūn
Forged earth — signifies strength deliberately shaped, noble character tempered like bronze, and grounded sovereignty.
Zhēng Yuè
Resonant mountain — unbreakable integrity fused with sovereign stillness and enduring might.