A beautiful and poetic girl’s name: Shaohua.
1. Shaohua: The beauty of late spring, the wind and clouds of Shaohua; beautiful, refined, elegant and generous.
2. Liangzhe: bright and noble, intelligent and polite; with a bright temperament.
3. Joyful appearance: joyful and beautiful; beautiful and dignified appearance.
4. Fengyin: Wind generally refers to the phenomenon of air flow. When used as a name, it can be expanded to mean lightness and briskness. Yin refers to a name for ancient poetry. Ancient people usually liked to chant the wind and the moon to express their full feelings, which is full of classical charm. The combination of Feng Yin gives people a very beautiful and emotional feeling.
5. Wan Ying: The word Wan is a commonly used word in ancient style words. It is often used in poetry to compare women to light purple plants such as aster, which can easily remind people of beautiful and romantic scenes. Shadow originally refers to a vague image, which can be understood as mysterious in ancient poetry. As a name, Wan Ying is both full of ancient connotations and very beautiful.
Introduction:
Girls generally refer to young female humans. Refers to the transitional stage from a baby to an adult woman. It varies in different societies, but is basically considered to be the transition from adolescence to adulthood, usually between the ages of 0 and 22.
There are 2.18 billion people in the world under the age of 18 (UNICEF estimate in 2004), of which more than 1 billion are girls. From birth, girls are slightly disadvantaged. There are natural reasons (statistics since the 18th century show that the sex ratio at birth is about 105 boys to 100 girls), and there are also deliberate gender choices by parents.
Although the International Economic, Social and Cultural Convention requires that "primary education shall be compulsory and free of charge," the proportion of girls obtaining primary education (70 versus 74 for boys) and the proportion of obtaining secondary education (59 versus 65) is still slightly lower than boys. In response, the Millennium Development Plan aimed to eliminate this inequality, and since 1990 this ratio has been significantly reduced.