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dulouz
Joined: 04 Feb 2003 Location: Uranus
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Posted: Tue May 31, 2005 6:37 am Post subject: What do two syllable names mean? |
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I have some students with two syllable names and no family name. Is that a scarlet letter (or syllable) for having no father? |
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the_beaver

Joined: 15 Jan 2003
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Posted: Tue May 31, 2005 7:04 am Post subject: Re: What do two syllable names mean? |
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dulouz wrote: |
I have some students with two syllable names and no family name. Is that a scarlet letter (or syllable) for having no father? |
No. It's a family name and a single syllable given name. |
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dulouz
Joined: 04 Feb 2003 Location: Uranus
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Posted: Tue May 31, 2005 7:07 am Post subject: |
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TY |
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tomato

Joined: 31 Jan 2003 Location: I get so little foreign language experience, I must be in Koreatown, Los Angeles.
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Posted: Tue May 31, 2005 3:45 pm Post subject: |
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That's what I thought at first, too.
But then I noticed the other teachers calling the child by his one-syllable name. |
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visviva
Joined: 03 Feb 2003 Location: Daegu
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Posted: Tue May 31, 2005 5:04 pm Post subject: |
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the beaver is right. Of course teachers and friends will call him (almost always a him) by the given name, possibly with the familiar -�� suffix. I have a student named ���� (Lee Hyeok). His friends call him ���� (Hyeogy). They might also just call him "Hyeok" (although they usually don't), just as �̼���'s friends might call him "Seong-min" as well as "Seong-minny."
Nothing stigmatic about this. Many scions of the royal Lee family bear single-syllable names -- Korea's last emperor, as I recall, was born Yi Cheok. The single-syllable thing seems to be especially popular among bearers of the �� name -- vide philosophers Yi I, Yi Ik, Yi Hwang. But it's also found in other ����. |
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Ekuboko
Joined: 22 Dec 2004 Location: ex-Gyeonggi
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Posted: Tue May 31, 2005 9:14 pm Post subject: |
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One of my students really hit the jackpot with a 3-barrelled first name,
���Ѵ�. She seems to be the only 2nd year student to be so 'lucky'.
I've got a few who just have a single syllable first name, too. |
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casey's moon
Joined: 14 Sep 2004 Location: Daejeon
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Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2005 3:24 pm Post subject: |
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I have one student who has a two syllabled last name. Seems the parents are more progressive than most, and wanted him to have his mother and father's last names. His family name is Moonshin (����). I wonder what will happen if he meets and marries a woman in 20 years whose family name is Parklee (����)-- will their children be Moonshinparklee (������)?
I'm all for equal rights, but the name thing seems like it isn't all that practical in the long run.... |
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tomato

Joined: 31 Jan 2003 Location: I get so little foreign language experience, I must be in Koreatown, Los Angeles.
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Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2005 4:10 pm Post subject: |
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How do Koreans with exceptional names fill out application forms with three spaces for the name?
I happen to be lucky, because the common Korean form of Thomas happens to be �丶��. So I just write in those three syllables, pretending that my family name is �� and my given name is ����. |
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tzechuk

Joined: 20 Dec 2004
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Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2005 5:28 pm Post subject: |
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visviva wrote: |
the beaver is right. Of course teachers and friends will call him (almost always a him) by the given name, possibly with the familiar -�� suffix. I have a student named ���� (Lee Hyeok). His friends call him ���� (Hyeogy). They might also just call him "Hyeok" (although they usually don't), just as �̼���'s friends might call him "Seong-min" as well as "Seong-minny."
Nothing stigmatic about this. Many scions of the royal Lee family bear single-syllable names -- Korea's last emperor, as I recall, was born Yi Cheok. The single-syllable thing seems to be especially popular among bearers of the �� name -- vide philosophers Yi I, Yi Ik, Yi Hwang. But it's also found in other ����. |
Korea had no emperor - they just had kings. The Chinese wouldn't let them have an emperor. |
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JacktheCat

Joined: 08 May 2004
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Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2005 6:50 pm Post subject: |
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tzechuk wrote: |
Korea had no emperor - they just had kings. The Chinese wouldn't let them have an emperor.
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Actually, Korea had one emperor, the second to last King (his name escapes me at the moment).
He was a little off his rocker though and nobody paid any attention to him when he proclaimed himself to be Emperor and Grand Pobah of the Korean Empire.
China had more than a few of their own problems at the time. |
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