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家和万事兴 or 家和萬事興 is a Chinese character for an idiom that means harmony in the family leads to prosperity in all undertakings.. It may refer to: Happy Home, All is well, 1986 Taiwanese television series starring Angela Pan
Hundred Family Surnames poem written in Chinese characters and Phagspa script, from Shilin Guangji written by Chen Yuanjing in the Yuan dynasty. The Hundred Family Surnames (Chinese: 百家姓), commonly known as Bai Jia Xing, [1] also translated as Hundreds of Chinese Surnames, [2] is a classic Chinese text composed of common Chinese surnames.
These are lists of the most common Chinese surnames in the People's Republic of China (Hong Kong, Macau, and Mainland China), the Republic of China (Taiwan), and the Chinese diaspora overseas as provided by government or academic sources.
Chinese family names are patrilineal, meaning derived from father to children. [8] [9] After marriage, Chinese women typically retain their maiden name. [10]Two distinct types of Chinese surnames existed in ancient China: Namely xing (Chinese: 姓; pinyin: xìng) or ancestral clan names, and shi (Chinese: 氏; pinyin: shì) or branch lineage names.
Mao Duanxing (貌端星): Lady Jia (the wife of Huang Feihu) Jin Fuxing (金府星): Xiao Zhen (in Shu version "Chen Ding") Mu Fuxing (木府星): Deng Hua (In Shu version, "Lu Shen") Shui Fuxing (水府星): Yu Yuan (In Shu version, "Yu Can") Huo Fuxing (火府星): Huoling Shengmu (In Shu version, "Wang Zhen") Tu Fuxing (土府星): Tu Xingsun
During the Dutch colonial era, the Dutch administration recorded Chinese names in birth certificates and other legal documents using an adopted spelling convention that was based primarily on the Hokkien (Southern Min), the language of the majority of Chinese immigrants in the Dutch East Indies.
Lujiang He Shi Jia Zhuan: Genealogy of the He Family of Lujiang: 21.622, n 5 盧諶別傳 Lu Chen Biezhuan: Unofficial Biography of Lu Chen: 22.653 陸氏祠堂像贊 Lu Shi Citang Xiang Zan: Records about Lu Xun and his family: 58.1343 陸氏世頌 Lu Shi Shisong: Lu Family Genealogy: Records about Lu Xun and his family: 58.1343 陸遜銘 Lu ...
The School of Names, or School of Forms and Names, [1] is a school of thought in Chinese philosophy that grew out of Mohist logic. Sometimes termed Logicians or Sophists modernly, Han scholars used it in reference to figures earlier termed Disputers in the Zhuangzi, as a view seemingly dating back to the Warring States period (c. 479 – 221 BC).