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  2. Chinese given name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_given_name

    In contrast to the relative paucity of Chinese surnames, given names can theoretically include any of the Chinese language's 100,000 characters [1] and contain almost any meaning. It is considered disrespectful in China to name a child after an older relative, and both bad practice and disadvantageous for the child's fortune to copy the names ...

  3. Chinese name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_name

    Chinese names are personal names used by individuals from Greater China and other parts of the Sinophone world. Sometimes the same set of Chinese characters could be chosen as a Chinese name, a Hong Kong name, a Japanese name, a Korean name, a Malaysian Chinese name, or a Vietnamese name, but they would be spelled differently due to their varying historical pronunciation of Chinese characters.

  4. Middle name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_name

    Middle names constitute the mother's maiden surname; is inserted between the given name and the surname (father's surname) and almost always abbreviated signifying that it is a "middle name". For example; given the name Jose Patricio Santos. This is usually abbreviated to Jose P. Santos. The abbreviated "P" signifies it is the maternal maiden ...

  5. Names of China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_China

    The name is thought to derive from the Chinese word for silk, 丝; 絲; sī; Middle Chinese sɨ, Old Chinese *slɯ, per Zhengzhang). It is itself at the origin of the Latin for 'silk', sērica . This may be a back formation from sērikos ( σηρικός ), 'made of silk', from sēr ( σήρ ), 'silkworm', in which case Sēres is 'the land ...

  6. List of common Chinese surnames - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_common_Chinese...

    A 2010 study by Baiju Shah & al data-mined the Registered Persons Database of Canadian health card recipients in the province of Ontario for a particularly Chinese-Canadian name list. Ignoring potentially non-Chinese spellings such as Lee (49,898 total), [24]: Table 1 they found that the most common Chinese names in Ontario were: [24]

  7. Generation name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generation_name

    Generation name (variously zibei or banci in Chinese; tự bối, ban thứ or tên thế hệ in Vietnamese; hangnyeolja in Korea) is one of the characters in a traditional Chinese, Vietnamese and Korean given name, and is so called because each member of a generation (i.e. siblings and paternal cousins of the same generation) share that character.

  8. Courtesy name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Courtesy_name

    Generally speaking, courtesy names before the Qin dynasty were one syllable, and from the Qin to the 20th century they were mostly disyllabic, consisting of two Chinese characters. [1] Courtesy names were often relative to the meaning of the person's given name, the relationship could be synonyms, relative affairs, or rarely but sometimes antonym.

  9. Shi (surname 時) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shi_(surname_時)

    Shi (simplified Chinese: 时; traditional Chinese: 時) is a Chinese surname meaning "season" or "time". [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It is romanized Shih in Wade–Giles, or Si in Cantonese romanization. [ 3 ] According to a 2013 study, it was the 187th most common name in China; it was shared by 670,000 people, or 0.05% of the population, with the province ...