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Multicultural Koreans are people of partial Korean descent.

=Terminology= Most terms for multicultural koreans are in reference only to multiracial Koreans, which here are a variety of. Honhyeol (Hanja: 混血; [[Hangul: 혼혈; lit. "Mixed Blood") has been accepted as the "standard" or de-facto term. There are several other terms, including haepi (해피, lit. halfie) or ban-ban (반반, half-half). There are also terms used to refer to a specific type of mixed ancestry, such as "han-mi honhyeol" (한미 혼혈), which is used to refer to people of mixed Korean and American ancestry. Other terms like this include "hanheuk-honhyeol" (혼흑혼혈, Half Korean, Half black) and "hanbaek-honhyeol (한백혼혈, Half Korean, Half white).

=History=

=List of multicultural Koreans= =See also= =References=
 * Woo Jang-choon (1898–1959, Japanese mother, Korean father)
 * Insooni (born 1957; Korean mother, African American father)
 * Boris Yugai (1957–2010; fully Korean by ethnicity, Kyrgystani by nationality, see Koryo-saram)
 * Yoon Mi-rae (born 1981; Korean mother, African American father)
 * Julien Kang (born 1982; French-Canadian mother, Korean father)
 * Crystal Kay (born 1986; Zainichi Korean mother, African American father)
 * Pavlo Lee (1988–2022; Ukrainian mother, Koryo-saram father)
 * Kiko Mizuhara (born 1990; Zainichi Korean mother, White American father)
 * Dmitry Bivol (born 1990; Korean-Kazakhstani mother, Moldovan father)
 * Michelle Lee (born 1991; Korean mother, African American father)
 * Han Hyun-min (born 2001; Korean mother, Nigerian father)
 * Jeon Somi (born 2001; Korean mother, Dutch-Canadian father)
 * Jang Won-young (born 2004; mixed Korean and Taiwanese, see Hwagyo)
 * Jenny Park (born 2006; Korean mother, Nigerian father)