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Hua is a common transliteration for some Chinese surnames, of which the most common ones are 華/华 (pinyin: Huà) [1] and 花 (pinyin: Huā). The Cantonese romanizations for 華 and 花 are Wah and Fa , respectively.
Hua Islet, Wangan Township, Penghu County (the Pescadores), Taiwan (Republic of China) Hua language (disambiguation), a name used for several unrelated languages; Hua's lemma, in analytic number theory; Harkat-ul-Ansar (HuA), a Pakistan-based Islamic paramilitary organization; Heard Understood Acknowledged, possible origin of hooah, a U.S. Army ...
According to tradition, the Hu (胡) surname has several historical origins. First, Hu could derive from the family of Duke Hu of Chen. King Wu of Zhou (r. 1046-043 BCE) enfeoffed his son-in-law Gui Man 媯滿 (supposedly a descendant of the legendary sage king Emperor Shun) with the state of Chen (in modern Henan Province).
Taiwanese politician Mei Feng had criticised the official English name of the state, "Republic of China", for failing to translate the Chinese character "Min" (Chinese: 民; English: people) according to Sun Yat-sen's original interpretations, while the name should instead be translated as "the People's Republic of China", which confuses with ...
According to the company founder Ren Zhengfei, the name Huawei comes from a slogan he saw on a wall, Zhonghua youwei meaning "China has achievements" (中华有为; Zhōng huá yǒu wéi), when he was starting up the company and needed a name. [31] Zhonghua or Hua means China, [32] while youwei means "promising/to show promise".
Hua Chenyu (born February 7, 1990) is a Chinese singer and songwriter. First debuting as the winner of Super Boy 2013 , he gained widespread recognition for his music talent, strong vocal ability and stage performance after participating in Singer 2018 .
Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research, a Taiwan-based international policy think tank Chunghwa Postal Museum , a museum located in Zhongzheng District, Taipei, Taiwan Chinese Taipei , the formal name used by Taiwan for diplomatic purposes, standardised in Taiwanese Mandarin as " Chunghwa Taipei ".
Huang (Chinese: 黃/皇) used in Mandarin; Hwang (Korean: 황; Hanja: 黃/皇) used in Korean; Huỳnh or Hoàng used in Vietnamese. Huỳnh is the cognate adopted in Southern and most parts of Central Vietnam because of a naming taboo decree banning the surname Hoàng, due to similarity between the surname and the name of Lord Nguyễn Hoàng.