I already tried Google Translate. It came out as "Quiet Two." Is this a common name or is it more of a saying? If it is a name, is it for a boy or a girl.
long answer, because it's unclear whose name it is:
Both 정(Jung usually also spelled Jeong) and 이(Lee or I or Ee or Yi or Ri) are common Korean family names.
The family name should usually come first when written in the Korean Hangul system, but occasionally a Western resident will write it Western style even though it's in Korean letters.
숙 is "Sook" or "Suk"
One guess is that somebody just swapped around the order of the syllables and put the "Lee" last. This will sometimes happen in a publication or news story geared towards Westernized readers of Korean.
"I" 이can also be an entire syllable of a girl's name, but again, there's no way to guess, because Korean names are written all together without spaces and besides, there's no context here to make a good guess.
On the other hand... it could be a given name writing of "Jeong-Suk" followed by an affectionate "-i" sound ending. It's not as common as "-ah" "-yah" added to the end of the name, but it's possible.
Oh, I don't know if it's a girl's name or a boy's, but I think it sounds boy.. and Lee (the third set) must be put in the beginning because Koreans put their last names first (unless the name is "Suk Lee" or "Suk I").. but I believe it's Lee Jeong Suk.. (of course, if it's indeed a name).
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short answer: it is a name
long answer, because it's unclear whose name it is:
Both 정(Jung usually also spelled Jeong) and 이(Lee or I or Ee or Yi or Ri) are common Korean family names.
The family name should usually come first when written in the Korean Hangul system, but occasionally a Western resident will write it Western style even though it's in Korean letters.
숙 is "Sook" or "Suk"
One guess is that somebody just swapped around the order of the syllables and put the "Lee" last. This will sometimes happen in a publication or news story geared towards Westernized readers of Korean.
"I" 이can also be an entire syllable of a girl's name, but again, there's no way to guess, because Korean names are written all together without spaces and besides, there's no context here to make a good guess.
On the other hand... it could be a given name writing of "Jeong-Suk" followed by an affectionate "-i" sound ending. It's not as common as "-ah" "-yah" added to the end of the name, but it's possible.
And it could be a specific person, Jung Sook-i, whom I believe was a disco singer back in the day... https://encrypted-tbn3.google.com/images?q=tbn:ANd...
Oh, I don't know if it's a girl's name or a boy's, but I think it sounds boy.. and Lee (the third set) must be put in the beginning because Koreans put their last names first (unless the name is "Suk Lee" or "Suk I").. but I believe it's Lee Jeong Suk.. (of course, if it's indeed a name).
ì ìì´ is a girl name.