Grand View of Appellations in Ancient China
1. Honorific Titles
Respectful titles, also called honorific titles, are titles that show respect for the other party in conversation. The word used to express honorific titles is called respect. Ci.
According to the part of speech of the respectful speech, there are three situations:
(1) It is a pronoun directly used to express honorifics, usually a monosyllabic word, and the commonly used ones are "Ru, Er" , Zi, Er, Gong, Jun, etc., these can all be translated as "you.
(2) Use nouns to replace words to call each other. These words are all two-syllable words, and this kind of title is also There are three forms: the general honorifics are "Sir, my son", etc.; the other party can also be represented by the place where the other party is located or the people under his command. Commonly used ones are "Your Majesty, Your Majesty, Your Excellency, Deacon, Right and Left", etc.; and the honorific titles of official status are used. For the other party, such as "king, doctor, general, son", etc. These nouns can also be translated as "you". Your Majesty refers specifically to the monarch and the emperor, and it does not need to be translated, and the official title does not need to be translated.
(3) Adjectives are used to refer to the behavior of people related to the other party. These words are usually two-syllable words. The first one is an adjective and the second one is a noun related to the person. Common ones are:
respect : Honorable Mansion, Honorable Brother, Honorable Driver, Honorable Madam;
Xian: Honorable Brother, Honorable Wife
Ren: Dear Brother, Dear Brother
Noble: Noble Body (meaning of greeting), noble surname, noble Geng;
Gao: high friend, high relative, high neighbor, high opinion;
Da: great gift, great work, great honor.
< p>These words generally do not need to be translated.These respectful words have changed with the development of society. The above two cases are basically no longer used now; while the third kind is still commonly used, these The title is both respectful and cordial, and the language atmosphere is also very harmonious.
2. Modesty
Modesty refers to self-proclaimed modesty. Words used to express modesty It is called Qianci. It can be understood and mastered in two ways: one is to use certain nouns to replace the word "I", and it can be divided into the following four categories:
One. It is to use one's surname or given name to express humility. "Su Zi and his guests went boating under Red Cliff." ("Red Cliff Ode") use surname; "The more Ji father heard about your seven days of mourning." ("Ji Twelve Lang Wen") 》) Use names.
The second category is to call yourself "a servant, a servant, a certain person, a villain" to express your apology for encountering this disaster. "("Report to Ren An") "A certain person has been familiar with military literature since he was a child. "("Lost Street Pavilion")
The third category is that women often use "concubine, maidservant, slave, slaveservant" to express their apology. "They are both forced, so are you and your concubines. "("The Peacock Flies Southeast")
The four categories are commonly used by monarchs: "Idiot (a person with little gain), Bubo (a bad person), Gu (a lonely person)" to express humility. In the country, you have to do your best." ("Mencius: King Hui of Liang, Part 1")
These modest titles can all be translated as "I".
The other is to use certain words to call people related to you. These words are all two-syllable compound words and the previous word modifies the following word. Judging from the part of speech of the modifier, it can be divided into three situations.
First, it is modified with adjectives to show humility. Common ones are:
Yu: Yu brother, Yu brother (both words mean "I"), Yujian, Yu. Meaning (both "foolish" can be translated as "my").
杝: 杝国, 杝悑 ("杝" is equivalent to "mine").
Jian: humble body, humble body, humble breath (calling one’s son in front of the king and emperor), humble wife (calling one’s wife). ["Bitch" is equivalent to "my"]
小: 小女,小儿,小小.
Wei: Weicheng
Humble: humble position.
The second is to use verbs to modify and express humility by behavior. Common ones are:
Plagiarism: steal thoughts, steal thoughts, steal stories. ("Stealing" can be translated as privately)
Fu Wei (lying on the ground and thinking. Used when expressing thoughts to superiors or juniors to elders), Fu Wen. ("Fu heard that the Holy Dynasty governed the world with filial piety." "Chen Qing Biao")
The third is to use nouns to modify it to show humility. To call your elder brother humbly in front of others, use "家". "Father, Lord, Lord, Yan" can all be used to refer to your father; "Mum, Ci" refers to your mother; "Brother" refers to yourself. brother. When addressing relatives who are younger or lower in seniority than yourself in front of others, use "She". "She's brother" means your younger brother, and "She's nephew" means your nephew.
"家" and "家" can both be translated as "my".
These modest titles have changed greatly with the development of society. The first situation is basically no longer used, and some of the second situation is still used.
3. Other titles
Self-proclaimed is the name used for oneself in front of others. The emperor calls himself "the humble man", the old calls himself "the old man", the young calls himself "the younger brother" in front of the elders, the monk calls himself "the poor Taoist and the poor monk", and the ordinary people call themselves "the humble". Modest titles are all self-titled.
Alternative titles refer to others. For example, the woman accompanying the bride is called "bridesmaid", and the aristocratic woman is called "lady". "Madam" was called the wife of princes in ancient times, and later it was used to refer to the wives of ordinary people. Old men are called "old husband", and young men are called "lao zhang". "Lang Jun". Honorific titles are all other titles.
Contemptuous titles are used to call others in a contemptuous tone, such as "Shuzi, Xiaozi, Nvliu."
Proper names are certain conventional titles. For example, the person who chops wood is called "woodcutter", the boatman is called "zhouzi", and the outstanding figures of the country are called "guoshi".
The pronoun is to borrow another title to replace the original title. For example, "heroine" is used to refer to a woman, "liyuan" is used to refer to a theater troupe, and "actor" is used to refer to a comedian. Pronunciation is a rhetorical metonymy.
Idiom is to refer to someone by a conventional and customary title. For example, "Laozi and Zhuangzi" refers to Laozi (Li Er) and Zhuangzi (Zhuangzhou) and their theories, and "Jiaohandaoshou" refers to Mengjiao and Jiadao.
Titles for people of different ages
Newborn people are called babies, and those who are less than one year old are called swaddling clothes.
Children are called children between the ages of 2 and 3.
A girl is called a 7-year-old girl. A 7-year-old boy is called Shaonian.
Those under 10 years old are called yellow mouth.
13 to 15 years old is called the age of spoon dancing.
15 to 20 years old is called the year of the dancing elephant.
A girl is called the golden hairpin year when she is 12 years old.
A girl is called her cardamom age when she is 13 years old.
Girls aged 15 are called the age of hairpins.
The age of 16 is called the age of jade;
The age of 20 is called the age of peach and plum.
The age of 24 is called the prime of life; when a woman gets married, is she called the vote? The year of plum blossom.
A 20-year-old man is called a weak crown.
The age of 30 is called the age of establishment.
The age of 40 is said to be the age of no doubt.
The age of 50 is called the age of knowing one’s fate.
The age of 60 is called the age of sixty or the age of ears.
Seventy years old is called the age of seventy.
The age of 80 is called the year of the Zang Dynasty.
80 to 90 years old? Years of age, years of age.
100-year-old happy birthday.
In addition, there are also people who call childhood as Zongjiao or Chuibi, teenagers as Bunfa, women waiting to get married are called Zainian or Taizi, old age is called Haoshou or Baishou, long-lived old people are called Huangfa, etc. .
Social terms and terms of friendship
When meeting for the first time, say "Jiu Yang"; when waiting for a guest, use "Kingwai";
When the other party writes a letter, say "Huishu"; when inviting someone Use "please" to help someone;
Use "please" to ask someone to do something; use "enlightenment" to ask for advice;
Use "high opinion" to praise someone's opinion; use "forgiveness" to ask for forgiveness. ;
When asking for an old person's age, "longevity" is used; when guests come, "come" is used;
To say goodbye, "farewell" is used; when visiting others, "visit" is used;
< p>Don't use "stay" to ask someone to send you something; say "bother" to trouble others;Use "borrow light" to ask for convenience; use "ask for advice" to ask for advice;
Welcome to buy It's called "patronize"; it's been a long time since we've seen each other, it's "long time no see";
If you leave in the middle of the way, it's called "loss compensation"; when you give away a work, it's called "xiuzheng".
Polite names among relatives and friends
Parents are called Gaotang, Chunxuan, parents, and knees.
Parents are called father, family strict; mother, family loving.
After the death of the father, he was called: "Xianfu, Xianyan, Xiankao".
After the death of the mother, she is called: late mother, first loving-kindness, and first heir.
Brothers and sisters call themselves brother, brother, sister, or sister.
Brothers are called Kunzhong and Sizu.
Husband and wife are called husband and wife, spouse, and partner.
The names of deceased peers are: deceased brother, deceased brother, deceased sister, deceased wife.
Other people’s parents call them: Your Majesty, Your Majesty.
Although brother and sister are called brother and sister.
Although people's children are called: son and daughter.
The wife's father is called: father-in-law, father-in-law, Taishan.
Other people’s families are called: Fushang, Zunfu.
The names of my family are: Humble House, House, and Thatched Cottage.
Men and women are collectively called men: men are called men, and women are called women.
The death of five parties in the couple means: widowed.
The teacher is called: mentor and master.
Students are called disciples and students.
The school is called: Hanchuang, Jichuang.
Classmates are called classmates.
A collection of ancient age titles
Infant: less than one year old.
Children: two to three years old.
The first and sixth years: a girl is seven years old.
The beginning of the year: the boy is eight years old.
Explanation: According to the physiological conditions, boys change their teeth when they are eight years old and girls turn seven years old. They lose their deciduous teeth and grow permanent teeth. This time is called "nian", "nian" or "nian".
General angle: a general term for childhood.
The year of hanging bun: refers to children. (In ancient times, children’s hair drooped, which was extended to refer to minors.)
Huangkou: under ten years old.
Kindergarten: Ten years old. ("Book of Rites·Qu Lishang": "The ten years of life are called youth and learning." Because there is no punctuation in ancient writing, people intercepted the word "Youxue" as the name for ten years old.)
Jin Chai Year: The girl is twelve years old.
The Cardamom Years: The woman is thirteen years old.
Zhixue: Fifteen years old. (The Analects of Confucius: Confucius said: "I am fifteen years old and determined to learn...")
Hairlock: The woman is fifteen years old. ("Book of Rites·Nei Principles": "A woman's hairpin is only fifteen years old.")
The age of the jade, the year of the broken melon: the woman is sixteen years old. (In the old days, literati used the word "melon" to indicate the year of twenty-eight, which means sixteen years old. It was mostly used for women.)
Weak crown: twenty years old. ("Book of Rites·Qu Li 1": "Twenty means a weak crown.")
Peach and Plum Nianhua: A woman is twenty years old.
Flower years: The woman is twenty-four years old.
Eli: Thirty years old.
Buhuo: Forty years old.
Destiny: fifty years old. (The Analects of Confucius: Confucius said: "When I was fifteen, I was determined to learn; when I was thirty, I was established; when I was forty, I was not confused; when I was fifty, I knew the destiny of heaven; when I was sixty, my ears were obedient; when I was seventy, I followed my heart's desires without exceeding the rules.") < /p>
The age of Zhifei: fifty years old. ("Huainanzi·Yuan Daoxun": "Boyu was fifty years old, but forty-nine years were not." It is said that there was a boyyu in the Spring and Autumn Period of Weiguo. He kept reflecting on himself. When he was fifty years old, he knew that he had forty-nine years before. The mistake in the middle of the year is called "Zhi Fei" in later generations.)
The year of Er Shun and Sixtieth Year: sixty years old. (Since ancient times, our country has used heavenly stems and earthly branches to coordinate with each other, which can form sixty pairs of stems and branches, so it is called "Sixty Stems and Branches" or "Sixty Years of Flowers", so the age of sixty is also called the "Year of the Sixty Years".)< /p>
Seventy years old. (Du Fu's "Two Poems on Qujiang": "Drinking debts are commonplace, but rare in seventy years of life.")
Old age: eighty or ninety years old. ("Book of Rites·Quli": "Eighty-nine-year-old is called an old man." Based on this explanation, people use the two characters together to refer to eighty-year-old and ninety-year-old people.)
Qiyi: a hundred-year-old person . ("Book of Rites·Quli": "One hundred years is called Qi Yi." It means that life lasts for hundreds of years, so one hundred years is called "the year of Qi Yi." Chen Hao, a man of the Yuan Dynasty, explained: "A life span lasts for one hundred years, so it is called "The Year of Qi Yi". period; food, daily life, and moving people all need to be nourished, so it is called Yi")
Men and women are collectively called: men are called men, and women are called women.
The death of five parties in the couple means: widowed.
The teacher is called: mentor and master.
Students are called disciples and students.