Your surname doesn't seem to exist among the Korean people, so no matter what your name is, you are a foreigner at first glance.
I wonder if you can take a single name and pronounce your full name like this? Others think that omitting surnames and saying only first names can achieve a very Korean effect.
I don't know if you are a man or a woman. If you are a woman, it will be easy. You can write with Jilin, Yuji, Jishun and Jishan in Korean.
Jilin-? Pronunciation: hi-lim
Concubine- Pronunciation: hi-ok
Ji Shun-? Pronunciation: hi-sun
Lushan-? Pronunciation: Hi, son.
If it's a man, it's a little troublesome. Ok, let's call it Jidong, because you are from China, so the word "Ji" is translated in Korean according to the Chinese homonym "Ji". Others think it is Jidong in Korean, which is a typical Korean boy name!
Jidong-Jidong- Pronunciation: Quildon
However, in the end, I sincerely suggest:
As a China person, there is no need to take a Korean name, even if you are going to study and work in Korea. Koreans can pronounce the names of China people almost fluently. After all, there is little cultural difference between the two nationalities in the Han Dynasty, which is completely different from taking an English name for the convenience of going to Britain and America.
In addition, the current naming trend of Korean, North Korea and South Korea in China is to converge to the Han nationality in Chinese mainland, and the national characteristics are increasingly invisible. Why is there such a change? Because the original Chinese characters used in Korean naming were too narrow, it caused a serious problem of renaming, which was very inconvenient. When you meet Kim, Kim and Kim in the future, you are likely to be Korean, Korean or Korean. _ I have a good Korean female friend named Huang Lin. Can you tell by her name?