Great Name
I just read this article on Associated Press its about a Chinese couple trying to name their child “@” yes “@” because when you mispronounce @ it sounds similar to “ai ta” (love him) I think its a interesting concept but the kid is screwed when he goes to University and needs an e-mail address i don’t think @@somewhere.com will work.
Anyways, here’s the full article
BEIJING (AP) — A Chinese couple seeking a distinctive and modern name for their child chose the commonly used Internet ‘at’ symbol, much to the consternation of Chinese officials.
The unidentified couple and the attempted naming were cited Thursday by a Chinese government official as an example of bizarre names creeping into the Chinese language.
The father “said ‘the whole world uses it to write e-mails and translated into Chinese it means ‘love him,’”‘ Li Yuming, the vice director of the State Language Commission, said at a news conference.
The symbol pronounced in English as ‘at’ sounds like the Chinese phrase “love him.”
Written Chinese does not use an alphabet but is comprised of characters, sometimes making it difficult to develop new words for new or foreign things and ideas.
In their quest for a different name, Li said that the parents of baby ‘@’ were not alone. As of last year, only 129 surnames accounted for 87 percent of all surnames in China, Li said, suggesting that the uniformity drove people to find more individual given names.
“There was even a ‘Zhao-A,’ a ‘King Osrina’ and other extremely individualistic names,” Li said, according to a transcript of the news conference posted on the government’s main web site, http://www.gov.cn .
Li did not say whether police, who are the arbiters of names because they issue identity cards, rejected baby ‘@’ and the others. But nationwide last year there were 60 million people’s names that used “unfamiliar characters,” Li said.
Or click the link













Posted in 
I'll do this later because I'm really lazy and I'm sure its of no real interest to you anyway.



August 23rd, 2007 at 11:12 pm
Interesting article. It seems that China is not the only country with parents trying to give strange names to their children. As you mentioned, it seems that no thought is put into their child’s life once getting into school or becoming an adult.
A famous example is in Japan, where a couple in 1993 attempted to name their child “Akuma” (literally Devil).
There must be examples of the same thing sort of thing being attempted in Canada as well, its just that our privacy laws prevent the news from getting out. Just a guess. Who know, perhaps we have little @s and Devils running around the streets of Vancouver and T.O.
Cheers
Allan
August 24th, 2007 at 12:27 pm
Ha Ha i remember hearing about people attempting to name their kids unusual names in Canada. But this is the first one I’ve heard of that’s trying for a symbol.
I figure if they are allowed to name their kid “@” I might have a chance of naming my kids “#*!@#”
August 30th, 2007 at 12:01 pm
Oh yeah, parents name their kids all sorts of things! I have heard of someone back in Ethiopia giving their son the English word “Insurance” as a first name.
September 18th, 2007 at 11:18 pm
Sounds like any one of my ESL classes here in China