What's up with some of these names?

Discussion in 'Chinese Chat' started by DirtyKlown, Aug 4, 2011.

  1. DirtyKlown

    DirtyKlown New Member

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    While in Shanghai recently, the Klown came across some funky English names - girls named Vinegar, Beautiful, Conan (for a girl!) - what's up with this?? Trust me, the one named 'Beautiful' is...NOT. Anyway, just needed to get it off the chest...

    Klown - out
     
    #1 DirtyKlown, Aug 4, 2011
    Last edited: Aug 4, 2011
  2. kevin

    kevin RAWR!

    lol wut, those are prob some 'nicknames'.
     
  3. ralphrepo

    ralphrepo Well-Known Member

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    Chinese in general, and not just girls, have been known for years to "adopt" an English moniker to give themselves a bit more international panache. They're not real names, just tags to be used socially. I even met a girl who called herself "Chevrolet" after having once heard the term in a song, and had subsequently mistakenly assumed it to be a girl's name. Years later, and to her intense embarrassment, it was finally revealed to her that the tune she heard was really a song about an American brand of automobile, LOL... She named herself after a car. That in and of itself is not bad (witness the thousands of girls who call themselves Porche). However, her choice of name in the automotive world is decidedly low end, to say the least.

    Thus, in this manner, many Chinese choose English names that they really have no real clue as to the real meaning of. Often times, the selection is based purely on the syntax or melodic linguistic quality of the term as it was pleasant to their ears.

    On that note, I'm personally waiting for someone to call herself CLOACA :D

    ...or a really nice way to call oneself an asshole.
     
    #3 ralphrepo, Aug 5, 2011
    Last edited: Aug 5, 2011
  4. koogepanini

    koogepanini Well-Known Member

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    ^Haha. New word to my vocab!

    But yah, I actually know a girl named Flower. I mean it's loads better than Vinegar but still. It might be ok in Chinese but in English it's just really sad.
     
  5. mr_evolution

    mr_evolution ( • )( •ԅ(ˆ⌣ˆԅ)

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    Funny enough there was a guy on PA called Flower as well
     
  6. ralphrepo

    ralphrepo Well-Known Member

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    A "Rose" (or Violet, Lily, Holly, Ivy, Angelica, Daisy, Jasmin, et cetera), by any other name, is just as sweet. Or, in this case, Ah Fah (flower) or Ah Cho (vinegar).
     
  7. mr_evolution

    mr_evolution ( • )( •ԅ(ˆ⌣ˆԅ)

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    I thought Cho was shrubs or bush, as in 花曹
     
  8. reno

    reno Well-Known Member

    don't forget those called rainbow :p
    and all the different fruit names hahaha
     
  9. DirtyKlown

    DirtyKlown New Member

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    True that. I know their English names are not legal names and they, for the most part, pick the names themselves. But man, are they that lame to not bother to look up the meaning of these words that they choose to represent themselves? Strange world we live in...
     
  10. brown_bear

    brown_bear ☆‧° ☆﹒﹒‧ ☆ ﹒﹒‧☆‧° ☆

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    ive heard of someone called 'titi' she was miss titi zhang i think her surname was

    but yeshhh i too think its strangeeee o_O
     
  11. kevin

    kevin RAWR!

    Wow so it can be possible in this era lol, I thought things like this only occurred during victorian time.
     
  12. mr_evolution

    mr_evolution ( • )( •ԅ(ˆ⌣ˆԅ)

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    Does she have nice tities?
     
  13. kevin

    kevin RAWR!

    lol :facepalm:
     
  14. Che Che

    Che Che Member

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    Silver, Rainbow, Apple, Cute, Queenie, just some names that made me think WHY?
     
  15. KingPin

    KingPin Well-Known Member

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    At least they don't have a name like my father in law. His name is 'Iron Tits' for some reason. Either his breasts are really tough or he likes to straighten laundry with his chest.
     
  16. ralphrepo

    ralphrepo Well-Known Member

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    LOL... TEET LEEN? That's a great moniker. Sounds like something that a triad member would love, ha ha...

    = Cao (as in Cao Cao 曹操)

    = Chol (as in Grass)

    = Chō (as in Vinegar)

    = Chō (as in Calisthenic, or Cao Cao 曹操)

    = Chō (as in Thick)

    = Chō (as in Noisy)
     
  17. brown_bear

    brown_bear ☆‧° ☆﹒﹒‧ ☆ ﹒﹒‧☆‧° ☆

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    ^ "teet leen"...thas more like iron rope..?..

    iron tits....would be something like 'teet hung'..??..
     
  18. KingPin

    KingPin Well-Known Member

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    Nope I think its 'Teet Bor'. Cracks me up every time I think about it. :laugh:
     
  19. brown_bear

    brown_bear ☆‧° ☆﹒﹒‧ ☆ ﹒﹒‧☆‧° ☆

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    ^ okies that is pretty funny...!!!..howd ya say it with a straight face....-lol
     
  20. ralphrepo

    ralphrepo Well-Known Member

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    On second thought, what I said sounded more like IRON NIPPLE, and your version is more like IRON CHEST.

    Yeah, TEET BOR sounds closer, though now I'm thinking one can say TEET TOFU, LOL...