Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Artistic names in Japanese

Artistic names in Japanese

Japanese names with artistic conception are as follows:

Following thousands of miles, fragrance-はるかのぁ., has been numb for a long time, and we just left miserably, ice, maple-かぇでひろし, floating in early March,

You can visit Dou-ゆぅとゆぅすけ, Lian-れん, Zhen-みずき, and you can visit -ひひ.

Introduction to Japanese:

Japanese (English: Japanese; Japanese: Japanese; Japanese pen name: にほんご), also known as Japanese, is the official language of Japan, with 6.5438+25 million native speakers and 654.38+0.6% of the world population using Japanese.

The origin of Japanese has been debated endlessly. Japanese in Meiji era classified Japanese as Altaic language family, which has been generally denied. Mo Hubeiat and Xiao Ye King think that Japanese belongs to Dalopita language family, Nishida Takashi thinks that Japanese belongs to Sino-Tibetan language family, Bai Guisi thinks that Japanese belongs to Japan-Koguryo language family, and Leon Angelo serafim thinks that Japanese and Ryukyu language family can form Japanese language family.

There is a hypothesis that Austronesian language family, Zhuang-Dong language family and Japanese language family can form Austronesian-Minnan language family, that is, they are all homologous.

In ancient Japan, characters were not used. Chinese characters were introduced from Baekje when Emperor Shen Ying arrived. The Japanese secretary, who wrote entirely in Chinese characters, said: "There were no words in ancient times, and it was passed down from mouth to mouth." In the period of Emperor Shen Ying, Baekje sent Akiki to Japan. In 285, Wang Ren, a Baekje doctor during the reign of King Xiaogu, brought China's Analects of Confucius and the Classic of Filial Piety to Japan, which was the beginning of Japanese contact with Chinese characters. After the Three Kingdoms period, Chinese characters and China culture were introduced into Japan in large quantities.

In the Tang Dynasty, a pen name popular among women was invented in Japan and Japan. The official language was classical Chinese, so modern Japanese was greatly influenced by ancient Chinese. Take Showa 3 1 Dictionary of Chinese Illustrations as an example. In Japanese vocabulary, Japanese accounts for 36.6% and Chinese accounts for 53.6%. In the 39th year of Showa, the National Institute of Japan investigated 90 magazine terms, and found that Japanese accounted for 36.7%, Chinese for 47.5%, and western languages for nearly 10%.