China Naming Network - Baby naming - Named after Jin Mu's fire, water and soil.

Named after Jin Mu's fire, water and soil.

Not only the mathematics in the name is about the five elements, but also the Chinese characters in the name have the attributes of the five elements and pay attention to the five elements. When the ancients named names, they paid great attention to the generation of Chinese characters. In terms of names, they are more afraid of the five elements, such as Jin Kemu, Wood, Tuke Water, Water and Fire. , advocate the generation of the five elements, such as gold, aquatic wood, wood fire, fire born soil, native gold, etc. A person's name is actually composed of several parts, one is the visible Chinese characters, the other is the calculated mathematics, the third is the audible voice, and the fourth is the perceived meaning. Names not only pay attention to the auspicious prosperity of mathematical patterns, but also pay attention to the auspicious prosperity of Chinese characters. From the perspective of Chinese characters alone, Chinese characters also have five elements. Some names are beautiful, pleasant to hear and easy to use, because Chinese characters have good meanings, beautiful glyphs, proper collocation and complement each other. A really good name must look beautiful, sound fresh and easy to read, and be handy to write. The interaction between the five elements of Chinese characters sometimes hides unhealthy factors. For example, in the name of Song Xiaobo, morning sun belongs to fire, wave water belongs to water, and fire and water coexist, so there are unhealthy factors. At present, some people only pay attention to mathematical auspicious patterns, but ignore the birth and development of Chinese characters. It is biased that the name only talks about the gram generation of Chinese characters and ignores the gram generation of mathematics. Similarly, it is biased to pay attention to the generation of grams in mathematics and ignore the generation of grams in Chinese characters. It's like going from one extreme to the other. So how to distinguish and define the five elements of Chinese names? Some people often use numbers to distinguish them. By counting the number of strokes of Chinese characters, we can determine the five-element attribute of this word. If the mantissa is 1, 2, it is considered to belong to wood; If it is 3 or 4, it is considered to be a fire; If it is 5 or 6, it is considered soil; If it is 7 or 8, it is considered gold; If it is 9 or 0, it is considered water. In fact, this method of distinction is incorrect. Take Jin Mu as an example. For example, the word "water" is indisputable water, but because it is four strokes, it is considered as "fire"; The word "wood" is undisputed wood, but it is also considered as "fire" because it is four strokes; The word "earth" is indisputable, but because it is three strokes, it is also considered as "fire"; Only the word "gold" is 8 strokes, and the word "fire" is 4 strokes, which meet the attributes of gold and fire respectively. The other three have changed sex. Therefore, it can be seen that this method of distinguishing the five elements of a single Chinese character by the number of strokes is mostly wrong. There is also a method of distinguishing by radicals, which is scientific in principle, because Chinese characters are hieroglyphics, where fire belongs to fire, water belongs to water, wood belongs to wood, soil belongs to soil, and gold belongs to gold. However, there are also shortcomings, that is, Chinese characters with radicals are easy to distinguish, while Chinese characters without radicals are difficult to distinguish their five-element attributes. Another problem is that a Chinese character has two or even three five-element radicals at the same time, which five-element radical should be taken? If it is a Chinese character without radicals, it is best to distinguish it according to its meaning. If it is a Chinese character with several radicals, it depends on which of the five elements is dominant and which is secondary. After comparing the two elements, we can distinguish their primary and secondary, and the primary and secondary can be divided, so we can't take one of the five elements and ignore the other. The method of distinguishing should not only refer to which radical the word belongs to, but also consider its practical or symbolic meaning. Another example is the word "beam", which contains water, wood and gold, because "knives" are generally metal. A word has three kinds of five elements. But its head is made of wood, which is aquatic. In fact, it is processed by "knife and axe" and can be used as a pillar. Therefore, whether there is water or gold, its original intention is to give priority to wood, followed by water and gold. For example, the word "Shantou" has water and mountains, and the mountains belong to soil, and water and soil coexist. Should we take its water or its soil? Its radical is "water", which means fish swim in the water. Although there are mountains and soil, water still accounts for the majority, so water should be the main one and soil should be the secondary one. Another example is the word "light". Although it seems that fire is stronger than water, it cannot be used mainly by fire. Because its radical is water, its meaning is mainly water, so it is usually understood as "fresh water" rather than "light fire". Its function is to weaken and dilute the flame with water, so "light" is a Chinese character with the same body of fire and water, and its main five acts as water and the second five acts as fire. Knowing this principle, it is easy to distinguish the five-element attributes of Chinese characters by the five-element radicals. There is another problem, that is, how to distinguish water, fire and soil without Jin Mu? If there are no five elements in Chinese characters, they can only be distinguished by their meanings. Although some do not directly express the five elements, they indirectly express the five elements. For example, the word "mountain" is originally made of mud and stone, so the five elements of this word belong to soil, and the mountain is a Chinese character with radicals and contains elements of soil. Another example is the word "Wang", which is actually the radical of the word "Yu". Jade is an ore and belongs to the earth, so the five elements belong to the earth. Chinese characters with the word "Wang" as the radical contain the elements of the earth. For example, Chinese characters such as "sun" and "light" are all issued by the sun or heat. The five elements belong to fire, so there are Chinese characters for "sun" and "light", which naturally include fire. What's more difficult is that some Chinese characters don't even show the indirect five elements, so we have to quote the classics and check their meanings in detail. This part is difficult to explain and understand. If you are not sure, you'd better consult experts and scholars. However, the general principle of distinction is to judge according to the meaning of words. Tracing back to the source, we will always find out the five elements of this word. From this point of view, a really good name should not only conform to the eight characters and five elements, but also match auspicious mathematics and physics, and also give cultural connotation. At the same time, in the selection and application of Chinese characters, we should also consider the restraint factors of the five elements.