The tradition of naming Chinese people is designed to distinguish members of the family through successive generations. A family would create or adopt a poem, and each male would be given a name that consisted of the family's surname, a character from their family's poem, the generation name and another character as their given name.
For the generation name, each subsequent generation would take the next character in the sequence. Registering the given name in the ancestral hall of the lineage group at the time when the couples were first married would ensure that the man would have a unique marriage name which identified his position in the lineage and their level of descent from the families' common ancestry.
Most Chinese given names contain one or two characters. They are written after the family name, and can be chosen later, with the help of the rest of the family. They are often chosen after the agreement of the grandparents. Parents will have at least a month before having to register their child's name, and the tradition of giving "little names" at birth means that time and care can be taken in choosing the given name. The "little name" is a form of nickname that can be used throughout a person's life by family and close friends.
Copyright © Shenyang Bureau of Culture, Tourism, Radio and Television. All rights reserved. Presented by China Daily.