When naming, pay attention to the pronunciation of the characters.
Chinese names generally consist of two or three characters and at most four characters. Chinese characters are often composed of one word, one root, and one word. A word has its own tone and phonology. When several words are combined together, they will have different overall phonological effects. Some people have good names, while others have bad names. The fundamental reason lies in the reasonable and unreasonable phonological matching. Whether a person's name is good or not depends first on whether it is smooth and clear when called, and whether it sounds harmonious and loud. This requires us to pay attention to the overall phonological effect of the words used in naming. Here, readers should pay attention to the following points The main problem.
Avoid the same initial consonants and finals for your first and last names
The pronunciation of Chinese characters is the sound produced by the initial consonants and finals put together. The tone plays a major role in whether the pronunciation of the name is loud and pleasant to the ear. .The reason why old-style poetry appears to be cadenced and rhymed is that a prominent feature is the harmony of tones. There are four tones in Chinese characters, which are divided into Yinping, Yangping, rising tones and falling tones. The surnames in our country are divided into tones, which is how they are divided into tones. Four categories. For example, there are Sun, Jiang, An, Gao, etc. in Yinping, Liu, Wang, Yang, Chen, etc. in Yangping, Dong, Li, Lu, Wu, etc. in upper tones, and Xie, He, Deng, Zhao, etc. in tones. Because If the tones of the surname are different, you should pay attention to the different combinations of the tones of the name to make it have a well-organized effect, and never be too rigid.
For example: "Wāng" (wāng) is composed of "武" (w) Ang (ang) is spelled as "Wang Wenwei" (wāngwénwēi), which is not suitable for naming. The three characters have the same initial consonants, which makes it difficult to pronounce. "Bao Bo Gang" also made the same mistake. If the two words are combined If the names are exchanged by one word and changed to "Wang Bowei" and "Bao Wenbang" or "Wang Wenbang" and "Bao Bowei", they will sound much more pleasant. Try to avoid the same initial consonants of the two words "Xiang Ling" so that they can be read more catchyly. Similarly, we should also pay attention to this issue when it comes to finals.
Avoid naming names with the same pronunciation as those of offensive words
Examples: Li Shi, Han Yuan, Epic, Names such as Du Zida are very elegant in meaning, but they are easy to be pronounced as "you are dead", "crying injustice", "dead body", "belly" etc. in spoken language.
Avoid names with the same flat and oblique sounds
Modern Chinese does not talk about levels and tones, but uses four tones. The so-called four tones of yinping, yangping, rising tone and falling tone, we say that we should pay attention to the tone effect, which means that the name combination must have a flat effect in reading or sounding.
For example: "Liu Jingxuan" has three characters that are all in the upper tones, which makes it a convoluted sound, so it is not as nice as "Liu Jingguan". "Zhang Shuxiang" is all in flat tones, so it is not as nice to hear as "Zhang Shuxiang". "Ji Zhongxian" "Both are in Chinese, not as good as "Ji Zhongxian".