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Korean Slang · casual

언니

unni/ʌn.ɲi/noun (kinship / address term)

Used by females to address an older female — biological older sister, older female friend, or favorite female celebrity.

TL;DR · 언니 (unni)
  • Meaning: Used by females to address an older female — biological older sister, older female friend, or favorite female celebrity.
  • Pronunciation: /ʌn.ɲi/ (unni)
  • Part of speech: noun (kinship / address term)
  • Formality: Casual — for friends, family, and close peers.
  • Literal: older sister (used by females)

What does 언니 mean?

언니 (unni, sometimes romanized "eonni") is the female-to-female counterpart of 오빠. A girl or woman uses 언니 to address any older female she is close to: actual older sister, older female friend, female cousin, or — in fandom — older members of K-pop girl groups. Outside fandom, women also use 언니 to politely address slightly older female strangers in casual contexts (a salon stylist, a market vendor) — Korean has no neutral "ma'am" for younger women, so 언니 fills that gap. It conveys warmth and respect without sounding stiff. Men do NOT use 언니 — they say 누나 (noona) instead.

Literal meaning
older sister (used by females)
Origin
Native Korean kinship term. Use as a friendly stranger-address spread widely after the 1990s.

Examples in context

언니, 이거 어때?
Unni, igeo eottae?
Unni, what do you think of this?
Asking an older female friend's opinion
우리 언니 너무 예뻐.
Uri unni neomu yeppeo.
Our unni is so pretty.
K-pop fan praising an older female idol
언니, 여기 김치찌개 하나요!
Unni, yeogi gimchijjigae hanayo!
Unni, one kimchi stew here!
Friendly address to a slightly-older female restaurant server

When to use 언니

  • Female speaker addressing an older female (sister, friend, cousin)
  • Talking about a female idol you admire (K-pop fandom)
  • Polite-friendly address to a slightly older female stranger in casual settings
  • Workplace if rapport is established and the company culture is informal

When NOT to use 언니

  • Male speakers — use 누나 (noona) instead
  • Formal business or interview settings
  • A woman much older than you (use 이모 imo or 아주머니 ajumeoni)
  • Strangers in formal contexts

Related terms

Cluster · Honorifics

More in Honorifics

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

Frequently asked questions

What does 언니 (unni) mean in Korean?

언니 (unni) means "older sister" but is used by female speakers only — to address any older female they are close to: actual older sister, older female friend, cousin, or favorite female celebrity. Men do not say 언니; they use 누나 (noona) instead.

Can men say 언니?

No. 언니 is for female speakers only. A man addressing an older woman would say 누나 (noona). Saying 언니 as a male would sound very strange or feminine.

Is 언니 the same as 누나?

They both mean "older sister" but differ by speaker gender. Women say 언니 to older females; men say 누나 to older females. The age/relationship rules are identical — only the speaker's gender changes.

How do you spell 언니 in romanization?

Common romanizations are "unni" (most popular in K-pop fandom) and "eonni" (Revised Romanization, official Korean government style). Both refer to the same word [ʌn.ɲi].

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.