Many people can't figure out Chinese surnames, and feel that there are many and cumbersome, and just a single character surname to a cross surname can stump a large number of people, not to mention that there are more than 23,000 types. As everyone knows, Japan is actually even more exaggerated, their surnames are as many as more than 300,000, and the main format is not limited, only you can't think of it, and there is no one who doesn't feel their surname. So the question is, how strange are Japanese surnames? Today, I will talk to you about the strange surnames of Japan. If you master this skill in Japan, then you will be able to successfully determine what this person's ancestors do.
For example, this person's surname is Yuwu, then his ancestor is a fish seller. So to expand the extension, Hattori's tailor surnamed Watanabe is a boatman, and the surname is Shibaro's seller. As for some groups with animals, such as dog breeding and pig feeding, there is a high probability that they will be engaged in the breeding industry. Of course, the Japanese actually worship the little pig, because they think that the pig is a beast second only to the bear, so there are many surnames in Japan with the word pig, such as pig nose, pig tail, pig claw, which makes you drool when you hear it. But there are still some ancestors in Japan that make it difficult to guess what they mean, such as nose hair, steel doors, and for example, my grandson, it is said that there is also a city in Japan where many people in the WeChat area of My grandson City are this.
Although this kind of surname can be heard, it is a bit difficult to evaluate how the Japanese surname came from. Can you believe it? My grandson, such a sensitive word can be used as a surname in Japan, and it will not be given a strange nickname. In fact, the ancient Japanese did not have a surname, only a first name, because the surname was exclusive to the nobles, and it was illegal for ordinary people to take a surname or a name, so it was gradually appeared in the shogunate ruling stage, such as what official position you held, you called it, because the clan represents political status, more like a title, which can be hereditary. Until the emergence of seedlings in Japan, when a small family wants to break away from the big family and go outside to take a look, it has to take a separate surname, or create a new surname.
In the 19th century, the Western powers bombarded the door of Japan with cannons, realizing that Japan could not keep up with the times, opened the Meiji Restoration stage. In order to facilitate the administration of the people, it is stipulated that every citizen must have a surname. Some nobles or small families are fine, and some illiterate ordinary people simply let go of themselves, and where they live, ** is the surname. For example, we often encounter Yamamoto, Yamagami or Murakami, Muraka, and Muramura when we watch TV, and what there is at home is the surname, and what Matsumoto and Inoue have reached a higher level in modern Japanese brain circuits, and you can believe in whoever you worship, such as Sarishi Buddha and Shakyamuni Buddha. You say normal people, who would have thought that such a strange word is actually a surname? What is the difference between a Chinese surname and a Japanese surname?
We have several patronic surnames, which are often mistaken for Japanese surnames. For example, the great poet Cao Hanwen, his pen name is Duanmu Yuliang. When I was young, some people said that I was Japanese. First of all, he is a native Chinese. Secondly, Duanmu is an ancient and aristocratic surname in my country, such as Confucius's February **Dynamic Incentive Plan**Zigong, his original name was Duanmu Ci. Secondly, Chinese surnames are fundamentally different from Japanese surnames. Our surname is actually divided into several periods, and the surname is the earliest for women, which represents the mother's family to prevent same-sex marriage. And men are generally called names, such as Qin Shi Huang Yingzheng, that is Ying's surname Zhao, so it is also called Zhao Zheng. Another example is Bo Yi Kao in the god list, his younger brother's name is Ji Fa, why is he not Ji in front of him? In ancient times, men and brothers were ranked according to Bo Zhong Shu Ji, Bo pointed out that he was the eldest son, Yi was his name, and Kao represented his untimely death.
Later, some big families felt that it was too troublesome to separate the surnames, so they combined the surnames. For example, your surname is Zhang, his surname is Wang, and your name is added to form the name we are familiar with now. Some friends may ask, why did some people still have words in ancient times? That's because once a man in ancient times passed the crown, it meant that he was an adult, and it was inconvenient to call him by his name, and he might have to avoid it, so the elders took a word to indicate an alias. And the Japanese name is more arbitrary, the simple order of the big ro, Jiro, or the pure gender name Lang, bear, male, husband, etc. So does anyone know what the last name Duoduo means?