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Korean Slang · casual

hyung/hjʌŋ/noun (kinship / address term)

Used by males to address an older male — biological older brother, older male friend, mentor, or older teammate.

TL;DR · (hyung)
  • Meaning: Used by males to address an older male — biological older brother, older male friend, mentor, or older teammate.
  • Pronunciation: /hjʌŋ/ (hyung)
  • Part of speech: noun (kinship / address term)
  • Formality: Casual — for friends, family, and close peers.
  • Literal: older brother (used by males)

What does mean?

형 (hyung) is the male-to-male equivalent of 오빠. A boy or man uses 형 to address any older male he is close to: actual older brother, older male friend, older cousin, mentor, older bandmate, or older teammate. Korean male culture places enormous weight on age hierarchy, so 형 is far more than a kinship word — it signals brotherhood, loyalty, and earned respect. K-pop fans hear it constantly when boy-group members address each other. Soldiers in Korean military service use 형 with older squadmates. Male athletes and idols use it within their teams. Critically, 형 only flows from younger male to older male; it is NEVER used by females (who say 오빠 instead).

Literal meaning
older brother (used by males)
Origin
Native Korean kinship term, derived from Sino-Korean 兄. Central to traditional male age-hierarchy culture.

Examples in context

형, 같이 밥 먹자.
Hyung, gachi bap meokja.
Hyung, let's eat together.
Younger male inviting an older male friend
저 사람이 우리 형이야.
Jeo sarami uri hyung-iya.
That person is my hyung.
Introducing an older male brother / friend
형들 덕분에 잘 됐어.
Hyungdeul deokbune jal dwaesseo.
Thanks to the hyungs, things went well.
Acknowledging support from older male peers (e.g. K-pop group)

When to use

  • Male speaker addressing an older male in a close relationship
  • Sports teams, military, K-pop boy groups, male friend groups
  • Talking ABOUT an older male brother / friend ("우리 형")
  • Indicating respect mixed with affection toward a male senior

When NOT to use

  • Female speakers — use 오빠 (oppa) instead
  • Strangers, formal business contexts (use a name + title)
  • Anyone younger than you
  • When precision matters — pair with 친형 (chinhyung, biological) if needed

Related terms

Cluster · Honorifics

More in Honorifics

Address older / younger / unrelated adults the way native speakers do.

Frequently asked questions

What does 형 (hyung) mean in Korean?

형 (hyung) means "older brother" and is used by male speakers only — to address any older male they are close to: actual older brother, older male friend, mentor, or older teammate. Women do not say 형; they say 오빠 instead.

Why do K-pop boy group members call each other 형?

Korean male culture is built on age hierarchy. Younger members of a boy group call older members 형 (or 형님 hyungnim, more polite) to acknowledge their seniority. It signals respect, brotherhood, and group cohesion — a fundamental part of male Korean social etiquette.

Is 형 the same as 오빠?

They mean the same thing ("older brother") but differ by speaker gender. Men say 형 to older males; women say 오빠 to older males. Mixing them is one of the most common Korean-learning mistakes.

How is 형 pronounced?

형 is pronounced [hjʌŋ] — "hyung" with a glide between the H and the vowel, and a final "ng" nasal sound like in English "song." The Y is closer to a semivowel than a full Y.

Further reading

External references for cross-checking the information on this page.

More Korean slang?

Browse the full Korean Slang Dictionary or read the deep-dive: Korean Slang Ultimate Guide.