If the noun class comes last, can this part of speech be put behind?

The basic method of word generation naming is "surname+word generation+first name". Individuals of different surnames and tribes choose one word in turn from the genealogy of their own family and combine it into their own names. There is a second way to substitute a name: "surname+first name+generation." For example, Shi, Shui, Mi, Zhi and Qing —— written by the Shi family in Ningbo stipulates that Shi and Mi are surnames+words+names, and the word "Shui" is the radical (such as "gradually" in the history of the 34th century), and it also stipulates "Zhi". The upper and lower generations all adopt the form of "surname+first name+generation", and a few adopt the form of "surname+generation". For example, "Hao" in the thirty-fifth history of Shi Shi, Siming, Ningbo, will combine generation and name into one. But this naming has a premise: the characters of this generation must be radicals or radicals, such as the word "water" in Shi, Shui, Mi, Zhi and Qing, such as Shi Juan. There is also an interesting phenomenon in family history and culture, that is, several surnames use a single word generation spectrum, such as Kong, Meng, Zeng and Yan, and they were named by the word generation spectrum from the beginning-this is unique in China. It originated from the inheritance of Confucius and Mencius and the mentoring (Kong Qiu, Mencius, Zeng Shen, Yan Hui). Related to the naming of Ci generation, Su Shi also witnessed the combination of "teacher" and "solution" in Song Dynasty.