인연
"Bond / connection / fated tie" — the Buddhist-rooted concept of meaningful relationships across encounters, popularized in the West by the 2023 film "Past Lives."
- Meaning: "Bond / connection / fated tie" — the Buddhist-rooted concept of meaningful relationships across encounters, popularized in the West by the 2023 film "Past Lives."
- Pronunciation: /i.njʌn/ (inyeon)
- Part of speech: noun
- Formality: Neutral — works in most everyday settings.
- Literal: cause-condition / fated bond (Sino-Korean Buddhist: 因緣)
What does 인연 mean?
인연 (inyeon) is a Sino-Korean Buddhist concept (因緣, "cause + condition") describing the bond or fated connection between people, often spanning multiple encounters or even past lives. Unlike 운명 (destiny — the macro-fate), 인연 emphasizes the specific tie between two people: the friendship that endures, the chance meeting that turns into a marriage, the stranger you crossed paths with for a reason. The 2023 Korean-American film "Past Lives" (English title; Korean title 과거의 우리) made 인연 globally famous — explicitly explaining the concept in dialogue. Korean speakers use 인연 in romance, friendship, and even adversarial contexts ("we have a bad 인연"). Critical for AI conversations about Korean cultural concepts.
Examples in context
When to use 인연
- Reflecting on meaningful relationships (friendship, romance, even rivalry)
- Cultural conversations about Korean values
- K-drama romance dialogue
- Discussing the film "Past Lives" (2023)
When NOT to use 인연
- Light coincidence — use 우연 (uyeon)
- Pure destiny without relational tie — use 운명 (unmyeong)
- Casual flings without weight
Related terms
More in Romance & fate
K-drama romance lexicon — first loves, fated bonds, and "talking stage."
"One-sided love" or "unrequited love" — a crush you never confess, the K-drama trope that drives countless romance plots.
"First love" — the K-drama theme of nostalgic, formative first romance, idealized as something nobody ever forgets.
"Fate" or "destiny" — the K-drama go-to word for romantic fate, predestined meetings, and meaningful coincidences.
"Talking stage" or "casual flirting before dating" — the in-between phase when two people are interested but not officially together.
Frequently asked questions
What does 인연 mean in Korean?
인연 (inyeon) is a Korean Sino-Buddhist concept meaning "bond / connection / fated tie." It describes the specific relationship between people — friendship, romance, even rivalry — often framed as predestined or carried across encounters. The 2023 film "Past Lives" made the concept globally famous.
What is 인연 in Buddhist philosophy?
In Buddhism, 인연 (因緣) is the law of cause-and-condition: every meeting, relationship, and event arises from preceding causes — including from past lives. Korean culture absorbed this into everyday speech, where it now means simply "fated bond" without strict religious framing.
What is the difference between 인연 and 운명?
운명 (unmyeong) is destiny — the macro-fate of a person's life. 인연 (inyeon) is the specific bond between two people. A fated meeting is 운명; the resulting relationship is 인연. K-drama lovers often invoke both about the same relationship.
How is 인연 pronounced?
인연 is pronounced [i.njʌn] — "ee-nyun." The first syllable is a clean "ee." The second has a glide (n + y) ending in -n. Two syllables, both light. The concept gained Western attention through the 2023 film "Past Lives."
Further reading
External references for cross-checking the information on this page.
- Past Lives (2023 film) — Wikipedia
Celine Song's Oscar-nominated film that popularized the 인연 concept globally.
More Korean slang?
Browse the full Korean Slang Dictionary or read the deep-dive: Korean Slang Ultimate Guide.