What radicals are added in the afternoon to become new words
Some people are famous and like to use the physical structure of Chinese characters to make a fuss. For example, the names Shi, Lei, Lin, Sen, Nie and Er are examples. The aesthetic effect of this naming is quite good, but it is a pity that our surnames can be used so little. And even if Shi, Lin and Nie have three surnames, it is impossible for everyone to use this method. Some people like to use the same radicals when naming names, and promote it as a naming technique, such as Li Ji and Zhang Chi. This technique is actually not worth promoting. If the radicals of the three names are exactly the same, it will make people feel monotonous. Especially when you sign in calligraphy, you will feel more strongly that the names with the same radicals, such as Jiang Langtao and He Xinren, will have a dull and monotonous feeling no matter how they are arranged, and will not produce aesthetic effects such as casual, varied, tortuous and coherent. Since we are naming names with Chinese characters, we should not only consider the abstract beauty of elegance and refinement in the sense, but also pay attention to the varied image beauty when writing. The above examples show that there is a collocation problem between the first name and the last name. If the physical structure has not changed, the name will appear dull and stiff. In the past, there were two techniques when using glyphs to name names, one was to split surnames into names, and the other was to add surnames into names. The so-called split surname as the first name refers to the interception of a part of the name as the first name, or the division of the surname into two parts as the first name. For example, Yi Yin, the assistant minister of Shang Tang, took a part of the surname "Yin". In addition, Nie Er, a famous modern musician, Shu Sheyu (Lao She), Zhang Dagong, Ji Wuyan, Dong Qianli and Yang Muyi also belong to this category. In addition, Lei Yutian and He Renke also split their surnames into two parts as their first names. Some people in the ancients divided the name into characters, such as Xie Ao, a patriotic poet in the Southern Song Dynasty, whose character was Zhen Gaoyu, and the characters were separated from the name. In the Ming Dynasty, Zhang Yi's character Sanyi, Xu Fang's character Ark and Song Mei's character Wenyu, and in the Qing Dynasty, you Dong's character Tongren and Lin Ji's character Jiren all belong to this category. It is also like Mao Qiling in the Qing Dynasty. Others divide their names into numbers, such as Hu Jue's old man Gu Yue and Xu Wei's Shuiyuetian Road in the Qing Dynasty. The so-called name-adding refers to adding some strokes or radicals to the surname to form a new word, such as Lin Sen, Yu Xu, Jin Xin and Li Ji.