Western names usually consist of two parts: the first name and the last name, not three parts.
Take the names of British and American people as an example:
The arrangement of British and American names is that the given name comes first and the surname comes last. For example, John Wilson (John Wilson), "John (John)" is the first name, "Wilson (Wilson)" is the last name.
Another example is Edward Adam Davis, "Edward" is his Christian name, "Adam" is his personal name, and "Davis" For the surname.
Some people also use their mother’s surname or the surname of someone close to the family as their second name. In the West, some people still use their father's name or their father's name, and add a small "Junior" or Roman numeral to the name suffix to show the difference. Such as John Wilson, Junior, (John William Jr.); George Smith, III, (George Smith is third.) Extended information
Chinese names are expressed in Chinese characters, and the Han nationality and some minorities Ethnic groups directly use Chinese characters to name their names, while the names of other ethnic groups are transliterated into Chinese characters, and some also give themselves another Chinese name. The first name and the surname together constitute the Chinese name.
In addition, in addition to having names, Chinese people in the past often also had characters. In traditional Chinese etiquette, usually only the elders can call people by their "name", while ordinary or junior people should not call people by their names. Even emperors and monarchs usually call their ministers by name. If they call their ministers by name, it will be more contemptuous, and it may even mean that the person is guilty.
According to ancient book records, there was a system for naming people in ancient China. The child is usually named by the father 3 months after birth.
But there are also names given when the baby is full moon, names given when one is one year old, and names given by relatives before birth. There are also novels about a mythical person whose name was given by sages or gods in advance, such as the story about Patriarch Chen Tuan naming Yue Fei in "The Complete Biography of Yue".
Baidu Encyclopedia--British and American names