오빠
Used by females to address an older male — biological older brother, older male friend, romantic partner, or favorite male celebrity.
- Meaning: Used by females to address an older male — biological older brother, older male friend, romantic partner, or favorite male celebrity.
- Pronunciation: /op̚.p͈a/ (oppa)
- Part of speech: noun (kinship / address term)
- Formality: Casual — for friends, family, and close peers.
- Literal: older brother (used by females)
What does 오빠 mean?
오빠 (oppa) is one of Korean's gendered kinship terms: it can ONLY be used by a female speaker addressing a male who is older than her. Despite literally meaning "older brother," its scope expanded long ago: a girl uses 오빠 for her actual older brother, but ALSO for an older male friend, a boyfriend, a husband, or — most famously in K-pop fandom — for any older male celebrity she likes. The term carries warmth and a hint of cuteness or affection. Korean dramas use 오빠 as a romance signal: the moment a female lead switches from 씨 (-ssi) or a name to 오빠 marks the relationship turning intimate. For male-to-male, the equivalent is 형 (hyung).
Examples in context
When to use 오빠
- Female speaker addressing an older male in a close relationship
- Talking about a male idol or celebrity you admire (K-pop fandom)
- Romantic addressing of a boyfriend or husband
- Casual conversation with an older male friend or coworker close to you
When NOT to use 오빠
- Male speakers addressing other males (use 형 / hyung instead)
- Formal business or interview settings (use a name + title)
- A man you do not know well — sounds inappropriately intimate
- Anyone younger than you
Related terms
More in Honorifics
Address older / younger / unrelated adults the way native speakers do.
Used by females to address an older female — biological older sister, older female friend, or favorite female celebrity.
Used by males to address an older male — biological older brother, older male friend, mentor, or older teammate.
Used by males to address an older female — biological older sister, older female friend, or older female romantic partner.
A casual address term for a middle-aged or older man you do not know — roughly "mister" or "uncle," though tone determines whether it sounds friendly or rude.
Frequently asked questions
What does 오빠 (oppa) mean in Korean?
오빠 (oppa) means "older brother" but is used by females only — to address any older male they are close to: actual older brother, older male friend, boyfriend, husband, or favorite male celebrity. Men do not call other men 오빠.
Can a man call another man 오빠?
No. 오빠 is gender-restricted — only female speakers use it. Men addressing older men use 형 (hyung) instead. This is one of the most common mistakes Korean learners make.
Is calling someone 오빠 always romantic?
No. 오빠 is the default term a younger female uses for any older male she is close to: brother, cousin, friend, coworker. It only becomes romantic when context (or tone, or relationship) makes it so. Many K-dramas use the moment of switching to 오빠 as a romance signal.
How is 오빠 pronounced?
오빠 is pronounced [op̚.p͈a] — "oh-ppa" with a tense, doubled P in the second syllable. The first syllable is a clean "oh" and the second is a sharp, hard "ppa," not a soft "pa."
Further reading
External references for cross-checking the information on this page.
- Korean kinship — Wikipedia
Family-relationship address terms including 오빠 and the broader Korean kinship system.
- Korean honorifics — Wikipedia
How honorific address terms function in Korean speech.
More Korean slang?
Browse the full Korean Slang Dictionary or read the deep-dive: Korean Slang Ultimate Guide.