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"The third place in the women's pole vault is Japan's Tomomi my grandson, so please ... Present an award to my grandson. ”
What is everyone's first reaction when they see this sentence, do they think that the host of the sports channel is scolding, in fact, it sounds like the scolding "My grandson" is a Japanese surname.
In addition to the surname "My grandson", there are many surnames in Japan that are not very clean. Even the Japanese themselves have sorted out the strange surnames of Japan. As everyone knows, these strange surnames that have been sorted out may seem just strange in Japan, but in the eyes of Chinese, there is really little difference between them and swearing.
The first thing I want to analyze with you is the Japanese surname "My grandson", don't underestimate this seemingly weird surname, this surname is still a very famous surname in Japan, and there is a city in Japan called "My grandson".
"My grandson" doesn't have any special meaning in Japan, and it is said that there are more than 1,200 people in Japan who have the surname "My grandson", and these people have many explanations about the origin of their surnames.
The surname is related to China, and is related to a Japanese pole vaulter. At that time, when this athlete participated in the pole vault competition in the mainland and won the medal, many people suspected that the host had pronounced it wrong, but after many verifications, everyone knew that there was still someone in the world with the surname "my grandson".
Although it is a bit of a suspicion of scolding no matter how it is translated, this surname is not even the top three among the strange surnames in Japan. There is a Japanese surname, which is changed to Mitarai, which also means "hand-washing place" in Japanese.
In the beginning, this surname was given to me by Japanese people who didn't know what to expect. I heard that it was because I was next to the sink in the temple that I gave myself such a name. At that time, Japan was able to take this surname, and it was definitely a group of people who had money left in the family, because "Mitarai" specifically refers to the handwashing place inside the shrine temple.
To put it simply, Japanese people who don't have money may not be able to wash their hands in the temple bathroom, so the "Mitarai" has a little bit of religious overtones and the wealth of the capitalists.
Do you think this is the limit of the Japanese brain? No, there is a surname in Japan called Inuyo, and even in Japan, this is not a good word. The surname was inspired by the dog owners who lived around the old Japanese aristocracy, but in China the surname is simply not too rude, and simply translates to "dog-raised".
It can be said that the surname of the dog is very similar to scolding, no matter how it is translated. The Japanese mean scolding "dog owners are not as good as dogs", and the Chinese translator is scolding "dog breeders". But these surnames, no matter how they are translated, are still not the limit of the Japanese. Do they have the surname "cow glutinous", do you know what it means?
It's "cow dung", and I specially checked it, and the word really doesn't mean anything else in Japan. How can I say it, it's quite unexpected, and I really want to ask the Japanese child with the surname "cow", has he really not thought about changing his surname?
It wasn't until the editor saw Japanese surnames such as, Daxiang, and Pigkou that I knew that "Ushizu" was just a microcosm of Japanese strange surnames. After all, the editor really can't imagine what kind of ruthless person can accept such a flavorful surname as "mouth".
At the time, if this is called "pig mouth" in China, it will definitely be beaten. It's no wonder that Japan is the only country in the world that has such a bit of a ninja as a ninja, and it turns out that the Japanese are born with a surname that is full of misfortune. It's also good to practice ninja, in case you feel insulted by others calling you, you can endure it, so as not to hurt the innocent.
If you want to say that the Japanese are so varied, and the surnames alone make people feel that they are not as humane as destroying their own surnames, it is, of course, the more than 7,500 surnames that have been added in Japan since the Meiji 8, and the stubbornness of the Japanese from ancient times to the present.
As far as the editor knows, there was no such thing as a surname in Japan before the eighth year of the Meiji era, and after the right to the surname was released in the eighth year of the Meiji era, it would be good to have an upper village, a middle village, and a lower village.
Many uneducated Japanese people are eager to establish their existence and role in the world through their surnames, so most Japanese surnames have evolved from where their ancestors lived, the nature of their work, and what they could see. Even after growing up, many people in Japan are reluctant to change their surnames, believing that this is part of Japan's evolutionary history.
This view is actually very similar to the evolution of Chinese surnames, except that the Chinese ancestors were more educated, so that future generations were spared. There are also some surnames in Japan that are quite normal, but when put together with the first name, it has a strange sense of comical.
For example, in Japan's "Middle Two Diseases Have to Fall in Love", there is a character called "A Spring Dream"; there is a young man in Japan called "Emperor Sakamoto", and he is on TV because of this; there is also an actor born in the forties and fifties in Japan called "Aoki Fart".
I can't say enough about the strange names of Japan, but if you are interested, you can find out for yourself, and then you will find that the world is really big, and there are really no surprises.
Author: Nocturnal Begonia Flowers