Name a baby in the Year of the Tiger. The boy’s father’s surname is Yan and he belongs to the year of the dragon. 23

1. Yan Gang Kun

2. Yan Kun

3. Yan Gang

Gang〈name〉

ɡānɡ

The handle of the Big Dipper

The evil star of the Gang star descends into the mortal world, and the canopy of the sky leaves the blue sky. ――"Water Margin"

Another example: Gangxing (the name of an ancient star. It is the handle of the Big Dipper); Gangxing Shayao (Tiangang Star and Earthly Evil Star); Gangdou (Tiangang Big Dipper)< /p>

Hill, a significant highland in a relatively flat area

Pei Yuan's "Guangzhou Records" said: "There is Wei Ta's tomb in the north of the city, and behind the tomb is Dagang, which is called Ma'an Gang. "-"Shui Jing Zhu·Yushui"

Gang gāng is also called "Tiangang". The three stars in the shape of the handle of the Big Dipper.

僃 郃 kūn ㄎㄨㄣˉ is the same as "kun". Wubi: yyff Zheng code: SYSB, U: 5803, GBK: 88D2 Number of strokes: 11, radical: tu, stroke order number: 41534153121 Same as "kun", kun is mostly used in the name of a person, "kun" kūn (phonetic. From tu, shen) Sound. Original meaning: one of the eight trigrams, symbolizing earth) Kun, earth, the hexagram of Yi. - "Shuowen" Kun, soil. ——"Zuo Zhuan·Twenty-two Years of Duke Zhuang" Kun is also the earth. ——"Yi Gua" Mountains and rivers are all the spirits of Kun. ——"Song Book·Le Zhi" Another example: Kun Yuan (Kun's Yuanshi virtue, refers to the virtue of the earth's endowment of all things); Kun Mu (earth; fire); Kun Hou (earth); Kun Zhen (symbolizing the earth) Fu Rui); Kun axis (imaginary earth axis); Kun Wei (dimension. Refers to the four directions of the earth); Kun Yi (earth. Tongkunyu) "Yi" hexagram name [one of the Eight Diagrams representing the earth] of the Eight Trigrams One Kun is the earth, the mother, the cloth, the cauldron, and stinginess. ——"Yi·Shuo Gua" Another example: Kun Gua (one of the eight trigrams, representing the place); Kun Qian (the name of an ancient book. Book of Yin and Yang) One of the sixty-four hexagrams The terrain is Kun, and a gentleman carries things with great virtue. ——"Yi Kun·Xiang"