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Sports Fun Facts / My Grandson Chimi

author:Looking at your phone in Wollongong

My grandson Tomomi (born March 17, 1988) is a Japanese pole vaulter born in Kusatsu, Shiga Prefecture, Japan. He is currently studying at Doshisha University. She won the bronze medal in the women's pole vault at the 2010 Asian Games with a time of 4.15 meters. Because its name has a special meaning in Chinese, it was once rated as one of the top ten interesting stories of the Asian Games.

Sports Fun Facts / My Grandson Chimi

My grandson Chimi served as the flag bearer of the 2017 Asian Games

In fact, in the early days, only samurai and nobles in Japan were eligible to have surnames. Until the Meiji Emperor period, japanese people must use surnames, so that the number of Japanese surnames began to increase explosively, and the number of surnames today is as high as more than 100,000, more than ten times more than the number of Chinese surnames. As a result, the probability of strange surnames appearing is greatly increased. Today we are going to take stock of Japan's strange surnames, which, if taken literally in Chinese, seem to be cursing no matter what they are, but in fact they are not.

My grandson, don't doubt it, japan does have this surname, and there are 236 families in Japan. Japanese surnames that are cognate with this surname also include Anshiro (1722 households in japan), My grandson (61 households in japan), and Anson (20 households in japan). "My grandson" is very common in Japan as a surname, and the first Japanese with the surname "my grandson" migrated from the imperial palace, so this surname still has some aristocratic flavor. But this surname is very awkward to understand in our sense.

Sports Fun Facts / My Grandson Chimi

My grandson Chimi

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