How to match glyphs when naming your baby

In the process of modern naming, less and less people pay more and more attention to the five elements of the birth date. Many young friends pursue more things that sound good, are easy to write, are easy to remember, and have connotation. Then How to match the name to make the name easy to write, beautiful and meaningful. Here I will tell you how to match the glyphs when naming your baby, so that you can give your baby a good-looking name. Things to note when naming your baby with glyphs

To avoid this problem, the characters in the name should use characters with different radicals. If it is a double name, the last character in the name may be the same as the radical of the surname. The middle character uses characters with different radicals. The characters are both varied and unified, creating an aesthetic effect that echoes from beginning to end, such as Hong Chuanbo, Lin Zhibin, Liu Shizhao, etc. The visual effect is much better.

1. When naming your baby, try to avoid using words that are too uncommon. There are a huge number of Chinese characters. The Kangxi Dictionary contains 42,114 characters, of which more than 30,000 are uncommon. The number of Chinese characters that ordinary people can recognize is generally around 3,000. Some people always like to use some uncommon words when naming, and some words cannot even be found in ordinary dictionaries. Maybe these people think that naming someone with a rare word that most people don't recognize will give people a good impression of being knowledgeable and educated. Not really. A name is a symbol for a person's interaction with others. If others don't know him, this kind of communication will be very inconvenient. And from a psychological point of view, when a person cannot recognize or pronounce another person's name, he will inevitably have an unpleasant feeling and may even be unwilling to interact with him. A psychology expert has made statistics and found that people named with relatively uncommon characters generally have poor social skills, and 80% of them are withdrawn. It seems that this makes sense.

2. When naming your baby, try to avoid using too many strokes to count the words. For example, the name "Ying Jin Mo" has a surname of 19 paintings and a first name of 23 paintings and 15 paintings respectively. Is this name a good name? From the following two aspects, this name is not good. First of all, there are too many strokes, making it extremely inconvenient to write. When a child was given this name, he didn't know how long it would take before he could write his own name. It was even too difficult for him to write, so he lost interest and confidence in writing. Secondly, the name ***plan 57 paintings, whether it is written or printed, is simply three "black lumps", which really gives people an "ink" feeling. Therefore, when naming, the number of strokes cannot be too many.

3. When naming your baby, you should also pay attention to the combination of strokes in the name. There are two aspects to note here. First of all, you can’t be heavy on both ends and light on the middle. For example, the name "Ju Yizhu" has 17 strokes at the beginning and 18 strokes at the end, but there is only 1 stroke in the middle, which is not good-looking. Secondly, you can put more emphasis on "head" than "feet", but you can't put more emphasis on "feet" than "head". For example, the name "Kuai Wen Gong" is heavy on the "head" and light on the "feet", so it doesn't look uncomfortable. But the name "Wen Xuanyuan" seems a bit uncomfortable, because it is heavy on the "foot" and light on the "head". There is also a name like "Ding Yingpu" that made the same mistake and does not look good when written.

In terms of the structure of the name's glyphs, attention should be paid to the staggered changes in the structure of each character in the eight-character naming. Chinese characters are composed of a series of radicals. If the characters in the name all contain the same radical, it will naturally appear monotonous and repetitive, giving people a boring and cumbersome feeling. This is the case with names such as Lin Shulin and Liu Yu. question.

As the basic element of a name, glyphs are not as important as pronunciation and meaning. However, if you choose a name without paying attention to the matching of glyphs, it will also make your so-called "good name" fade away. Less, strictly speaking, such a name is not really a good name.

The glyph of a name involves two issues: the number of strokes and the structure of the glyph. There is no strict standard for the number of strokes in a name, but generally speaking, in order to facilitate writing and make people clear at a glance, the name should not have too many strokes. Because there are too many and complicated strokes, and writing a signature is too troublesome.

However, the name should not have too few strokes. If the strokes are too few and too simple, the name will appear too thin and give people a poor visual effect. If there is a name like "Ding Yi", the full name will only be Three strokes are really too simple.

Please take a look at this name: "Ju Yihe".

This name gives people the impression that it is heavy at the two ends and light in the middle. The number of strokes at the beginning and end is 17 and 15 respectively, while the middle character only has 1 stroke. It looks like the upper body is long and the lower body is short, which is very unsightly.

In addition, the strokes of some surnames are relatively simple, such as "Ding", "文", etc., so it is not easy to use multiple strokes to connect the words after the baby's name, otherwise it will look uncomfortable and have some confusion. It feels like the "feet" are heavy and the "head" is light.

When naming your baby, try to avoid having the same radicals and radicals for each character in the name. For example: "Nie Jing", "Diao Xisi", "Jiang Haichao", "Bian Lianxuan", "Guo Yubang" and so on. The pronunciation and meaning of these names are good, but they make the same misunderstanding of the radicals of each character in the name, giving people a monotonous feeling and lack of beauty. As the saying goes: "Writing is like looking at a mountain and being happy if it is not flat." Avoid straightforward descriptions in articles, and the same goes for naming children.

The strokes of each character in the name should be relatively equal, so as to give people a sense of stability and balance. Otherwise, it will look unsightly and uncomfortable to write. The name as a whole should have some "architectural beauty". For example, the word "来" is a word with an interspersed structure. If it is named "Laishenwu". In terms of glyphs alone, its overall structure and shape look quite comfortable. The disadvantage is that the three characters of the last name and the first name appear too consistent and monotonous overall. It should be said that this name is "organized", pays attention to symmetry, and has a certain "architectural beauty". The reason for this is because the character "Lai" in this surname first sets the "tone".

For another example, Ding is a character with a single structure and few strokes. This requires a matching name, preferably one with fewer strokes. For example: Ding Xiaolan, on the whole, gives people a relatively even, harmonious and comfortable feeling; Ding Fansen, gives people the feeling of a small head and a heavy body, which is disharmonious; Ding Yiwei, gives people the feeling of being light in front and heavy in the back. Disharmonious.

In the same way, the character Yan has more strokes, so it is best for the character to match it to have more strokes. For example: Yan Zi Lei is relatively well-proportioned; Yan Yi Hu looks top-heavy; Yan Zi Yi makes people feel unbalanced. When Yan wins, he feels like carrying two baskets with one burden, almost stable and coordinated.

The same goes for single-character names. For example: Ding Ping, the overall structure and shape are harmonious; Ding Ying, which means the head is small and the body is heavy; Yan Yi, it is top-heavy; Yan Zi, the overall structure is well-proportioned and the body is full.

The overall structure and shape of the name should not only start with the strokes of the characters, but also focus on the changes in the glyphs, and pay attention to the coordination and beauty of the glyphs. For example: the name Guotuanyuan, the three characters are all surrounded by structure, not to mention the pronunciation, just from the glyph, this name gives people the feeling that it lacks variety, is monotonous, and is completely closed. This is the bad impression given by the overall incongruity of the name.

Characters, like people, can also be divided into several categories, such as strong type, thin type, solid type, weak type, etc. Words like these, such as Yan, Cheng, Wei, Hao, and Rong, give people The feeling is strong, upward, vigorous, full of vitality and vitality. And these words are like thin children, giving people the impression of being soft, passive, and less decisive, such as Dou, Ping, Nian, Shi, Bo, and Ke.

Some characters belong to the young and strong group, appearing as strong, rich, powerful and aggressive as a thirty-year-old man, such as Qu, Lu, Sui, Feng, Ji and Tai.

Weak words give people a feeling of emptiness, emptiness, and some have some indescribable mystery. These characters sometimes look like the skeletal and voiceless Lin Daiyu, giving people a wonderful feeling, such as Ji, Kou, Men, Fang, Xing and Gong.

When naming their children, parents should know the principle of "too much is not enough" and pay attention to the combination of strong, weak, solid and imaginary characters. Names like Cheng Weihao, Wu Pingke, Fu Jitai, and Menjida are what we need to work hard to avoid. Some of these names are composed of three strong characters together, which makes them appear too full; some names are composed of three thin or weak characters, which appear to be deficient, hypocritical, bluffing or too empty. These should be avoided when naming.

In short, the glyph matching of the baby's name depends on whether it is beautiful and generous, and the "cut" is appropriate. Some name strokes also involve the stroke matching of each character in the name.

Han people's names generally consist of two or three characters. It is appropriate for the strokes of each character to be evenly distributed. However, it is not necessary or impossible to achieve a uniform number of strokes in each character. Sometimes, the number of strokes in each character is different. Despite the disparity, they will receive a variety of interesting names, such as Zhao Zhilin, Sun Keke, Ge Ruyi, Sun Jingyi and other names. Therefore, as for the strokes of a name, it only needs to be moderately simple and traditional, and have a moderate density.