Feng Féng means two horses running fast. The Han Chinese surname Feng féng has two origins. One is the surname Ji, and the other is the surname Gui. The surname Feng is an ancient surname with many ethnic groups and origins. The following is the information compiled by me. Thank you for reading.
Feng Zhaoxiang, Feng Jiajun, Feng Antu, Feng Aidi, Feng Yunchao, Feng Yingfeng, Feng Yuanyu, Feng Xiaofei
Feng Jingfei, Feng Yingfei, Feng Meishi, Feng Shimei, Feng Xiaomei, Feng Xiaomei, Feng Xiaojing, Feng Manying, Feng Huiming
Feng Baixiang, Feng Yingcheng, Feng Shiyu, Feng Jingyu, Feng Xiaoyu, Feng Xiaohui, Feng Huorong Feng Yingxun
< p>Feng Shijia, Feng Qirui, Feng Zhirui, Feng Jinjing, Feng Yuhan, Feng Yunxiao, Feng Junwei and Feng JunjieFeng Junran, Feng Yunyi, Feng Shuoning, Feng Huanqing, Feng Yifan, Feng Junnan, Feng Shiyu, Feng Zitong
Feng Shiqiang, Feng Yudi, Feng Jingwen, Feng Xiaoji, Feng Chuqiao, Feng Junhan, Feng Xihan and Feng Xiwen
Feng Sanhe, Feng Lanwan, Feng Yanwan, Feng Lanqi, Feng Lanying, Feng Xunying, Feng Yingting, Feng Qianchun
Feng Jingyi, Feng Lanxiao, Feng Xiaoying, Feng Yiwen, Feng Qiqi, Feng Nanwei, Feng Yuhang, Feng Yuguo
Feng Tongtong, Feng Yimin, Feng Weixin, Feng Qianxian Feng Xianxin, Feng Qixin, Feng Shengxuan, Feng Qixuan
Feng Qixin, Feng Wanxin, Feng Huiren, Feng Shixuan, Feng Wanxin, Feng Xianjun, Feng Jiexin, Feng Shihan
Feng Yingying, Feng Jiaxuan, Feng Haixin, Feng Jiaxuan, Feng Zixin, Feng Zhixin, Feng Xiancheng, Feng Aotian
People with the surname Feng Source
The surname Feng féng of the Han nationality has two origins, one is the surname Ji, and the other is the surname Gui.
Other Feng surnames were changed from foreign surnames, including the Huns in the early Han Dynasty, the Baekje people in the Southern and Northern Dynasties, the Wei people in southern Guangdong and Guangxi during the Yuan and Ming Dynasties, and the Manchu and Mongolian people in the late Qing Dynasty.
Comes from the surname Gui, after Feng Jianzi. During the Yao and Shun period more than 4,000 years ago, the Guiyi clan lived in Shangqiu, Henan Province, with the white-headed man as their totem. One branch of the Gui surname migrated to the Heze area in present-day Shandong Province and formed the Hebo tribe. Entering the Emperor Mang era of the Xia Dynasty, the descendants of Feng Yi, the leader of the Hebo tribe, established the Feng Yi Kingdom in Feng Di, present-day Dali County, Shaanxi Province, which went through the Xia, Shang and Wednesday dynasties. At the beginning of Zhou Dynasty, Feng Yi Kingdom split into three kingdoms: Feng, He Zong and Han. During the Spring and Autumn Period, Jian Zi, an official of the Zheng State, was given the surname Gui by Zheng Jian Gong and was granted this place. He was the first person of this branch with the surname Feng.
It comes from the surname Ji, after Ji Chang, and is inherited from Bi Gonggao and the ancestor Feng Wensun. According to the records of "Yuanhe Surname Compilation" and "Guangyun", Bi Wan's son, the fifteenth son of King Wen Jichang of Zhou Dynasty and a descendant of Bi Gonggao, followed the Jin Wen Gong Kingdom and was named Wei Wuzi, and was granted the title of Wei. In 403 BC, King Weilie of Zhou Dynasty officially conferred the Wei family as vassals, and one of his descendants, Wei Changqing, was granted the title of Fengcheng. One is said to be Xingyang County in Henan Province today, and the other is said to be Dali County in Shaanxi Province. Therefore, the descendants of this branch gradually gave up the surnames of Bi and Wei, took Yi as their surname, and changed their surname to Feng, which was known as the authentic Feng family in history. The descendants of Wei are named Wei, so the two surnames Feng and Wei are actually from the same lineage.
Origined from the Xianbei people. It comes from the Tuoba Mutai clan of the Tuoba tribe of Xianbei during the Northern and Southern Dynasties. It is a surname based on the official title of its ancestors. Among the descendants of Tuoba Mu Tai, the descendant of Tuoba Tao, Emperor Taiwu of the Northern Wei Dynasty, his eldest son Tuoba Suiliu succeeded Feng Yihou in the title and later became the originator of the Mu family in Daijun; among the descendants of his second son Tuoba Gou, Some people who took the ancestral official title "Marquis Feng Yi" as their surname were called Feng Yi in Chinese. Later, they were simplified to the single surname Feng in provincial Chinese and gradually integrated into the Han nationality.
It originated from the Mongolian Gaizhu clan. It comes from the Galazhu clan of the Barhu tribe in Mongolia in the early Ming Dynasty. It is a surname based on the Chinese name of the clan.
Derived from the Manchu clan Wusu and Fusiku. It comes from the Jurchen tribes in the Ming Dynasty, and is a Chinese-style surname.
Five Principles for Naming Rat Babies
1. Name the Rat based on the Three Meetings Principle
According to the Three Meetings Principle of Numerology: Hai Zi Chou Sanhui Shuihui
Therefore, people born in the Year of the Rat are suitable to have the character "Hai" in their names. Dr. Zheng gave examples: Jia, Hao, Hao, Yi, Xiang, Yi, etc. have the shape and radical of pig.
Therefore, the names of people born in the Year of the Rat are suitable for characters with son. Dr. Zheng gave examples: Shui, Cheng, Bei, Hei, Yong, etc. have the shape and radical of rat.
Therefore, it is suitable for people born in the Year of the Rat to have ugly characters in their names. Dr. Zheng gave an example: Mou, Sheng, etc. have the shape and radical of "ox".
2. Which radicals of words do people born in the Year of the Rat like?
What radicals do people born in the Year of the Rat like? The following are the most commonly used ones:
Acupoint : Fu, Juji, Jia, Rong, Rong, Rong, etc. have cave glyphs and radicals.
ㄇ: Tong, Tong, Zhou, Gao, Shang, Xiang, etc. have the ㄇ shape and radicals.
囗: Yuan, Yuan, Guo, Wai, Tu, Hui, etc. have the shape and radical of "嗗".
Kou: Ke, Si, He, He, Ming, Pin, etc. have kou glyphs and radicals.
He: Cheng, He, Rui, Xiu, Dao, etc. have the shape and radical of grain.
Dou: Deng, stirrup, 璒, feng, li, li, etc. have the shape and radicals of bean.
Mai: Noodles, Qu, etc. have the shape and radical of grain.
Liang: Liang, etc. have the shape of grain and radicals.
Mi: grain, chrysanthemum, lin, lin, etc. have the shape and radicals of grain.
Gold: Ming, Xin, bell, silver, button, etc. have gold glyphs and radicals.
3. Radicals that are not suitable according to the principle of conflict and avoidance
Because Zi and Wu conflict with rat and horse, so friends are reminded that the following radicals are not suitable for people born in the Year of the Rat:
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Horse: Qi, Jun, Teng, Qi, Du, Zhu, etc. have horse glyphs and radicals.
Wu: Huo, Ran, Nan, Dan, Zhu, Bing, etc. have the shape and radical of Wu.
4. Radicals that are not suitable according to the principle of six evils
Because Zi, unharmed rat and sheep cross each other, friends are reminded that the following radicals are not suitable for people born in the year of the rat. :
Sheep: Mei, Hui, Yi, Qun, Itchi, Xiang, etc. have the shape and radical of sheep.
Wei: Mei, Mei, Mei, Mo, Mo, Mei, etc. have the shape and radical of Wei.
5. Radicals that people born in the Year of the Rat do not like
According to the principles of numerology and arithmetic, people born in the Year of the Rat do not like the following radicals:
Snake: Chong, Zhi, Chuan, Chuan, Ji, Gong, Yi, etc. have the shape and radical of snake.
Jian: Jian, Nai, Ting, Ting, Ting, Yan, Ting, etc. have snake shapes and radicals.
Lian: Xuan, Lian, Kai, Zhang, Zhi, Xuan, etc. have snake shapes and radicals.
Chong: Rong, Ying, Hong, Qiang, etc. have the shape and radical of "Chong".
Ri: Chang, Yi, Ming, Guang, Hui, Xi, etc. have the glyph and radical of Sun.
People: Ren, Ren, Xiu, Fu, De, Jian, etc. have Chinese characters and radicals.