Abstract

Personal names contain considerable meaningful information about biological and social characteristics of the name-bearer. They also routinely contain important data about cultural preferences in the naming process. Access to this level of information has been limited in the past by a lack of access to large-scale empirical data. As this investigation demonstrates, by utilizing a reliable large-scale sample of Beijing citizens, it is possible to empirically demonstrate onomastic imbalances in the occurrence of Chinese surnames, given names, and full names. In particular, this paper explores the matching imbalance between Chinese surnames and given names, a phenomenon which has as yet received scant attention in onomastic literature. As this article demonstrates, our innovative quantitative approach makes it possible to reveal statistically significant differences between real names and “random-matching names” that reflect a matching imbalance and imply the probable existence of underlying cultural preferences in Chinese naming processes. The key to this approach is generating a matching preference index (MPI) for names in a dataset. Alongside explaining how this approach is used, this paper offers possible reasons to explain why specific names have higher or lower MPI rankings. As this paper argues, one of the main reasons for these empirical differences may be found in special associations name-givers have within Chinese culture.

Highlights

  • Information on NamingPersonal names serve more functions than providing identification

  • One of the main reasons for these empirical differences may be found in special associations name-givers have within Chinese culture

  • As onomastic research gradually enters the era of big data, to establish a micro-to-macro bridge, statistical analysis has become increasingly important (Castellano et al 2009)

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Summary

Background Information on Naming

Personal names serve more functions than providing identification They often contain meaningful information, such as social psychological processes (Allen et al 1941), esthetic values (Finch et al 1944), ethnicity-specific characteristics (Nick 2017 2013), and ideology (Bloothooft & Groot 2008). Homonyms are closely linked to China’s history and culture Through association, they can add meaning to Chinese personal names, making them more or less attractive to speakers (Li 2007). We present an innovative, quantitative approach to reveal statistically significant differences between real names and “random-matching names” that reflects a matching imbalance and implies the probable existence of underlying cultural preferences in Chinese naming processes. The surname precedes the given name in our study

Materials and Methods
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