Chinese naming numerology, known as Xing Ming Xue (姓名學), operates on the principle that the stroke count of a person's name characters carries numerological energy that interacts with the life path. Each total stroke count maps to one of the Five Elements, and the combination of surname strokes, given name first character strokes, and given name second character strokes is analyzed across several grids: the Heaven Grid (surname), the Human Grid (surname plus first character), and the Earth Grid (surname plus second character), among others. Auspicious numbers in these grids are associated with smooth life trajectories, leadership capacity, wealth accumulation, and health. Inauspicious numbers carry associations with obstacles, health challenges, or isolation. The stroke count method is one of several overlapping systems: some practitioners also apply a twelve-fate cycle to name totals, mapping them to the same progression used in BaZi luck analysis. Others use phonetic analysis — the sounds of the name, when spoken aloud, should not create negative homophones in the local dialect. A name that sounds like 'certain death' in Cantonese but reads beautifully in Mandarin requires rethinking. Beyond numerology, parents consider the elemental deficiency in the child's BaZi chart. If the birth chart is short on Water, the name characters may be chosen to include the water radical (氵) or carry Water element associations in their meaning.
The meaning of the characters matters as much as their numbers. Chinese characters are not arbitrary symbols — they carry layered semantic content, visual imagery, and cultural resonance. A name meaning 'morning light on still water' evokes a very different quality than one meaning 'victorious iron.' Parents and naming specialists consider what energy the child will carry and project through decades of introduction, signature, and invocation. This isn't trivial: a name is spoken thousands of times over a lifetime, and the tradition holds that repeated naming reinforces the qualities encoded in the characters. Guanyin (觀音菩薩), the bodhisattva of compassion, is frequently invoked in the naming process — not to select the name, but to bless the child's path and ask for protection as they grow into the identity being bestowed. Temples often have resident specialists who combine BaZi reading, stroke count analysis, and auspicious date selection for major life events including naming ceremonies. The selection of a propitious day for the official registration of a name — or for the ceremony in which the name is first formally announced — adds another layer of intentionality. In this tradition, a name is not simply given; it is chosen with as much care as the child's first home.