MsQiwiie vs Ms Qiwiie: Spelling Variants & Real Name (2026)

“MsQiwiie”, “Ms Qiwiie”, “ms.qiwiie”, “miss qiwiie” — these are all the same person: Ting Shi Qi, the Malaysian TikTok and Instagram creator. As of April 2026, all four spelling variants are widely used in search and social media, splitting traffic across multiple results pages. This guide explains the canonical spelling, why the variants exist, which one to use when, and how to find her real accounts safely.

Last updated April 2026 — variant frequency data based on 28-day Google Search Console impression share for msqiwiie.com.

Quick answer: which spelling is correct?

The canonical spelling is MsQiwiie — one word, capital M, capital Q, double-i ending. This is how she writes it on her own TikTok handle (@msqiwiie) and Instagram (@msqiwiie). All other variants — Ms Qiwiie, ms.qiwiie, miss qiwiie, msqiwie (single-i typo) — are search-driven mis-spellings or stylistic choices that ultimately land on the same creator.

All known spelling variants — at a glance

VariantWhen you see itUsed by
MsQiwiieCanonical, official handleTing Shi Qi herself, official press, this site
Ms QiwiieSpace added by autocorrectMobile keyboards, news headlines
ms.qiwiieIG-style stylisation with dotFan accounts, search re-typing
miss qiwiiePhonetic interpretation of “Ms”Voice-search results, casual fans
qiwiieShortened (drops “Ms”)Friends, repeat searches
msqiwie / mqiwiie / msqiwiiCommon typos (single-i, dropped letter)Search auto-correct fallthrough

Why so many variants exist

Three things drive the spread.

1. The “Ms” prefix confuses keyboards. When a Malaysian fan types “MsQiwiie” into Google or TikTok search, mobile autocorrect frequently inserts a space (“Ms Qiwiie”) because it parses “Ms” as the title (Mrs/Ms/Miss) followed by a separate word. This is also why “miss qiwiie” appears — voice-to-text systems pronounce “Ms” as “Miss”.

2. Instagram-style dot stylisation. Some fan accounts re-share her content using ms.qiwiie as a stylised reference. The dot is a fan convention, not used by Ting Shi Qi herself.

3. The double-i ending is unusual. Most English spellings end in single-i or “y”. The double-i in “Qiwiie” is intentional — part of her brand identity — but invites typos like “msqiwie” or “mqiwiie”.

Which one should you use?

For social media: use @msqiwiie — the official handle on both TikTok and Instagram.

For search: any variant works — Google clusters all of them to the same entity. The canonical “MsQiwiie” returns the most relevant results because it matches her own bio.

For writing about her: use MsQiwiie on first reference, then “she” or “Ting Shi Qi” (her real name) afterwards. Avoid the dot-stylised variant in formal writing.

How to find her real accounts (and avoid impersonators)

The double-i ending and the visual similarity between variants make MsQiwiie a frequent target for impersonator accounts. Verify before following or messaging:

  • TikTok: the verified account is @msqiwiie with the blue checkmark. Account spelling is the canonical one — exactly eight characters, double-i.
  • Instagram: same handle (@msqiwiie), verified.
  • Anything with a dot, underscore, or extra letter (msqiwiie_, ms.qiwiie, msqiwiie.official, etc.) is almost certainly a fan account or impersonator.

The variants in search data — what we see

Across the last 28 days of Google Search Console data for msqiwiie.com, the variant share looks like this (impressions, MY market):

Search variant share (28-day impressions, April 2026)
msqiwiie (canonical)
~50%
ms qiwiie (with space)
~30%
qiwiie (short)
~12%
miss qiwiie
~5%
other typos
~3%

The takeaway: half of all branded searches use the canonical spelling. The “ms qiwiie” (with space) variant is the largest single source of fragmented impressions — and is the one most likely to produce different first-page results, because Google occasionally treats the space as a delimiter.

What about her real name?

MsQiwiie is the online persona of Ting Shi Qi, a Malaysian schoolteacher who became a full-time creator. “Ting Shi Qi” itself has variants — Ting Shiqi, Ting Si Qi, and the romanised Tan Shi Qi all appear in different sources, but the spelling she uses publicly is Ting Shi Qi (three words, capital initial on each).

For full background on her real name, age, hometown, and how she became MsQiwiie, see our MsQiwiie biography page or the dedicated Ting Shi Qi real-name guide.

Frequently asked questions

Is it MsQiwiie or Ms Qiwiie?

The canonical spelling is MsQiwiie — one word, capital M, capital Q, double-i ending. “Ms Qiwiie” with a space is the same person; the space is usually inserted by mobile autocorrect.

What is MsQiwiie’s real name?

Her real name is Ting Shi Qi. She is a Malaysian schoolteacher turned full-time TikTok and Instagram creator.

Why does she spell her name with two i’s at the end?

The double-i ending in “Qiwiie” is part of her intentional brand identity. It is unusual in English but consistent with how she writes the name across all her social accounts.

Is ms.qiwiie a different person?

No — ms.qiwiie (with a dot) is a stylised fan-account-style reference to the same MsQiwiie / Ting Shi Qi. She does not use the dot variant on her own official handles.

How do I find her real TikTok and Instagram?

Both are at the handle @msqiwiie, both with verified blue checkmarks. Anything with extra characters (underscores, dots, .official, etc.) is almost certainly a fan or impersonator account.

Bottom line

One person, one creator, one canonical spelling: MsQiwiie. Every variant — with a space, with a dot, with “miss” instead of “Ms”, or with a typo’d single-i — leads back to Ting Shi Qi, the Malaysian TikTok and Instagram star. The variants are real, search-driven, and sometimes split traffic, but they don’t split her identity.

For the full picture, start at the MsQiwiie biography page, or jump to the Who Is MsQiwiie? overview and the latest on her boyfriend (LilzQuan).

— MsQiwiie Editorial Team. Last updated April 2026.

How to type each variant on different devices

If you are searching from a phone, the canonical “MsQiwiie” can be tricky to type because most autocorrect dictionaries don’t recognise it. Here’s how it usually breaks down by device.

iPhone (iOS keyboard): by default, iOS autocorrect splits “MsQiwiie” into “Ms Qiwiie” and capitalises both parts. To stop this, type the name once, tap it in the suggestion bar to add it as a learned word, and iOS will stop splitting it on the next try. You can also add MsQiwiie as a Text Replacement (Settings → General → Keyboard → Text Replacement) so typing “msqi” expands to the full canonical spelling.

Android (Gboard / Samsung Keyboard): behaves similarly to iOS — most Android keyboards insert a space between “Ms” and “Qiwiie”. Long-press your suggested word and tap “Add to dictionary” the first time you type it correctly. Voice input is the worst offender: it almost always returns “miss qiwiie” because it reads “Ms” as the title.

Desktop browser (Chrome / Safari / Firefox): there is no autocorrect on the address bar or search bar by default, so the canonical spelling stays intact. Spelling-check in Google Docs or Word will underline “MsQiwiie” as unknown, but you can add it to your custom dictionary in one click.

How search engines handle the variants

Google’s entity-matching system clusters all major variants (“MsQiwiie”, “Ms Qiwiie”, “ms.qiwiie”, “miss qiwiie”, “qiwiie”) to the same entity — Ting Shi Qi the Malaysian creator. This means that whichever variant you type, the top organic results, the Knowledge Panel (when present), and the People Also Ask block draw from the same source pages.

Where the variants diverge is in the lower SERP positions. “Ms Qiwiie” with a space sometimes pulls in unrelated results that contain those two tokens separately — a Malaysian schoolteacher named “Ms” plus a brand or product called “Qiwiie”, for example. The canonical spelling is therefore the cleanest query if you want only her content.

TikTok and Instagram in-app search behave differently from Google. They prioritise exact handle matches first, then partial matches, then content matches. Typing “MsQiwiie” into TikTok search returns her account immediately at the top, while “ms qiwiie” with a space returns her further down because the platform interprets the space as a separator.

Don’t confuse her with similar names

Three creators with similar handles occasionally get mixed up with MsQiwiie. None of them are her.

  • “Qiwii” / “Qiwi” — a different stylisation, sometimes a brand handle. Different person.
  • “MsQwen” / “Ms Qwen” — another Malaysian creator with a phonetically similar handle, but a different niche and audience.
  • “Qwiqwi” / “Qwiqwii” — fan and remix accounts that pop up around viral MsQiwiie clips. Not her, and not affiliated.

The visual fingerprint of an authentic MsQiwiie account: verified blue checkmark, the canonical handle @msqiwiie, and bio referencing Malaysia / Ting Shi Qi. If any of those three are missing, you’re not looking at her real profile.

One last thing: pronunciation

The handle is pronounced “miss kee-wee” — “Ms” said as the title (the same way you would address a teacher), then “Qiwiie” as a soft, two-syllable “kee-wee” with the double-i barely audible. Most Malaysian fans say it the same way; an English-only speaker often defaults to “miss kwee-vee” or “miss kee-vee”, which is close enough but not how she pronounces it herself in her own videos.

If you have heard her introduce herself in a TikTok or interview, that is the canonical pronunciation. Anything close to “miss kee-wee” gets you there.

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