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  2. Bulma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulma

    Bulma (Japanese: ブルマ, Hepburn: Buruma) is a fictional character in the Dragon Ball franchise, first appearing in the original manga series created by Akira Toriyama.She made her appearance in the first chapter "Bulma and Son Goku", published in Weekly Shōnen Jump magazine on 19 June 1984, issue 51, [3] meeting Goku and befriending him and traveling together to find the wish-granting ...

  3. Chinese character meanings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_character_meanings

    Most Chinese characters represent only one morpheme, and in that case the meaning of the character is the meaning of the morpheme recorded by the character. For example: 猫: māo, cat, the name of a domestic animal that can catch mice. The morpheme "māo" has one meaning, and the Chinese character "猫" also has one meaning.

  4. Buruma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buruma

    Buruma may refer to: Buruma, Japanese for bloomers, specifically athletic bloomers; Bulma (ブルマ, Buruma), a character in the Japanese comic series Dragon Ball, by Akira Toriyama; Ian Buruma, pen-name of an author on Japanese culture; Buruma (Baucau), a village in East Timor in the district of Baucau

  5. List of Dragon Ball characters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Dragon_Ball_characters

    Many Dragon Ball characters have names that are puns, which are associated with related characters. For example, Bulma and her family are named after undergarments, members of the human-like alien race known as the Saiyans are named after vegetables, and because Frieza is a pun on freezer , the Ginyu Force are named after products that are kept ...

  6. 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.

  7. Wikipedia:Naming conventions (Chinese) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Naming...

    Character sequences for words with a single meaning, often consisting of two characters, seldom three, are written without intervening hyphen or space. This also holds for compound words combining two words to one meaning: hǎifēng (simplified Chinese: 海风; traditional Chinese: 海風, sea breeze). Summary from the Library of Congress:

  8. List of Commonly Used Standard Chinese Characters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Commonly_Used...

    The list also offers a table of correspondences between 2,546 Simplified Chinese characters and 2,574 Traditional Chinese characters, along with other selected variant forms. This table replaced all previous related standards, and provides the authoritative list of characters and glyph shapes for Simplified Chinese in China. The Table ...

  9. 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 ...