At present, if there are many surnames in China, will those who bully those with few surnames be hel

Updated on culture 2024-08-08
33 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-15

    As long as you violate the law, no matter which surname you have or which family race, you will be punished by the law.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-14

    At present, the nature of abandoned women with many surnames in China, will those with few be held legally responsible? You won't be held legally responsible, because you're a bully, and there's no reason for that.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-13

    This is just a personal contradiction, and if there is a contradiction, as long as it does not cause harm, there is no responsibility.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    I think people bullying you, it should have nothing to do with more surnames and fewer surnames, if you say that you use force, then you can sue him, even if it is slanderous and insulting, you can also sue him, and he will be detained.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    At present, the seven Buddhas with many surnames in China and those with few surnames will be held legally responsible? According to Chinese law, anyone who does not discriminate by surname will be held legally responsible for bullying others.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Regardless of whether there are more surnames or fewer surnames, those who are bullied and bullied will be punished by law.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    This depends on whether there is a violation of the law, and it has nothing to do with the surname.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    At present, there are many surnames in China, and there are few near seven, so why won't you pay legal responsibility? As long as you bully you, there are heavy and light, and you will pay legal responsibility.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    It is a very normal social phenomenon for this big surname to bully a small surname, and there is no clear responsibility in this regard in the specific law.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Bullying more and less will definitely attract social attention, and if the incident is more serious, it will definitely bear legal responsibility.

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    At present, there are few good surnames in China, and you have to look at the specific situation, if he beats you, scolds you, or insults you, you can go to the court to sue him.

  12. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    If there is a fact of bullying, of course, you must bear legal responsibility, and no one can act arbitrarily.

  13. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Look at whether the bullying violates the law, and if it is illegal, then it will be held legally responsible.

  14. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    At present, if such an act causes defamation, it will definitely bear the corresponding legal responsibility.

  15. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    It depends on what you mean by bullying? If it's just a kind of exclusion, then it really doesn't constitute any legal responsibility.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Now there is no such phenomenon, as long as the law is violated, it will be punished.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Each and every one of us is equal.

    Anyway.

    It is illegal to bully people.

    Legal liability may apply.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    To see how people with many surnames bully people with few surnames, it should be based on facts.

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    In China, there are many surnames and few surnames, and I have not heard of the phenomenon that there should be no one who bullies whom between surnames and surnames.

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    There is nothing to say about this, and it has now come out. The Chinese New Year is all about new ideas.

  21. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    You're playing a game of words and there's no fact of committing a crime, so there's no way to tell you what legal responsibility you should bear.

  22. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    The one with many Chinese surnames bullies the few surnames, if he does something illegal, he will definitely be held legally responsible.

  23. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    At present, will those with many surnames in our country who bully those with few surnames lose the law? We have a lot of Chinese surnames, which are Zhang, Wang, Li, and Zhao.

  24. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    At present, if there are many surnames in China, will those who bully those with few surnames be held legally responsible? As long as the Chinese law is violated, it will be legally responsible, and it has nothing to do with the number of surnames.

  25. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    Chinese bullies with many surnames, and those with few surnames will not be held legally responsible, and I have not heard of this clause.

  26. Anonymous users2024-01-21

    This doesn't seem to be legally responsible!

    There is no such thing in the law.

  27. Anonymous users2024-01-20

    Difficult surnames are the least.

    First to last: Difficult.

    In ancient times, there was a tribe that worshipped a bird whose name was Nan, but they all moved north to Korea, and this surname is rarely seen in China.

    Penultimate Count: Death.

    This surname was developed from the four-character compound surnames of ethnic minorities in the ancient northwest, and the number of people with this surname is now decreasing.

  28. Anonymous users2024-01-19

    Difficult surname, (read to sound) distributed in Henan Province, is the development of the surname of the Xianbei people during the Northern and Southern Dynasties, originally a bird name, because the people at that time admired birds, the surname became "difficult", and then moved north, most of them migrated to the Korean Peninsula, China has rarely existed.

  29. Anonymous users2024-01-18

    The last names you haven't seen are the fewest ones.

  30. Anonymous users2024-01-17

    There are no or few surnames among Han Chinese surnames. Such as Sai, Na, Ha, Su, Yu, Di, Ya, Tiger, Bai, Ti, Sa, Shaanxi, Shan, Su, Sa, Ma, Mu, Black, Sand, Sea, Duo, Zhe, Hui, Jade, Put, Rough, A, Change, Xian, Xi, Ding, Ke, Lean, Sprinkle, Swing and so on.

    The country has a large number of surnames and a long history. The surnames in the history of the Chinese nation have always been said to be hundreds of surnames, Chang Yun:"Zhao Qian, Sun Li, Zhou Wu, Zheng Wang, Feng Chen, Chu Wei, Jiang Shen, Han Yang"There are 5,662 surnames in the literature among Chinese, including 3,484 single surnames, 2,032 compound surnames, and 146 three-character surnames.

    This does not include the Chinese character surnames translated by the Mongols and Manchus who migrated to the Central Plains in the Yuan and Qing dynasties. The surnames of the few ethnic groups in the border region translated into Chinese characters are also not counted. The Song Dynasty's "Hundred Family Names" included 628 surnames, and the Ming Dynasty's "Thousand Family Names" included 1,594 surnames.

    Since the liberation, there have been more than 2,200 surnames in the household registration files of Beijing Municipality and 1,400 surnames in Shanghai.

    The title of the hundred family surnames originated after the publication of the work "Hundred Family Names" in the Song Dynasty. According to Chinese historical records and the appearance of oracle bone inscriptions, China is the first country in the world to use surnames, but in ancient China there is a strict distinction between surnames and surnames, during the third dynasty of the Xia and Shang dynasties, men were called more names, women were called surnames, and the names were the representatives and titles of the aristocratic patriarchal system, that is, the tribal organizations in ancient times.

  31. Anonymous users2024-01-16

    There are fewer surnames, quite a lot!

    Qian, Zou, Tu, Gou, Yu, Xiong, Hong, Tan, Long, Gu, Zhu, Ge, Jiang, Ni, Fan, Xing, Xiang, Yin, Lan, Tong, Zhen, Ru, Wen, Ma, Hua, Pei, Xu, Lei, Bian, Mei, Wan, Pi, Hui, Du, Fei, Lang, Qu, Yan, Mu, Han, He, Ping, Su, Lai, Ji, Yi, Zeng, m...

  32. Anonymous users2024-01-15

    Origin of the Hundred Schools: The origin of surnames can be traced back to the matriarchal clan system of primitive human society, so many of the earliest surnames in China are next to or bottom of female characters, such as the surname Yao. A surname is used as a specific symbol to distinguish a clan, such as the name of a tribe or the name of a tribal leader.

    Legend has it that the Yellow Emperor lived on the shore of Ji Water and took Ji as his surname; Emperor Yan lives next to Jiang Shui and takes Jiang as his surname. Huangtian took Dayu's merit in controlling the water, and gave him the surname as his wife. In addition, the son of a tribal leader may also receive a surname.

    The Yellow Emperor had twenty-five sons, and there were 14 people with surnames, including Ji, You, Qi, Ji, Teng, Ren, Xun, Xi, Yi, and Yi, and 12 surnames, of which four belonged to two surnames.

    After Zhu Rong, the eight surnames of self, Dong, Peng, Bald, Cao, Pour, and Mi are known as the eight surnames of Zhurong.

    With the development of the social productive forces, the matrilineal clan system transitioned to the patrilineal clan system, and the clan system was gradually replaced by the class social system. The emergence of the clan is the footsteps of human history into a class society. Surnames and surnames are the two stages of human progress and are the products of civilization.

    During the Xia and Shang periods, nobles all had surnames. The branch of the surname is clan, which means equivalent to family or clan. The Xia royal family is surnamed Ji, and the overlord Kunwu is his surname, and his surname includes Su, Gu, Wen, Dong, Fenglong and so on.

    The Shang royal family is surnamed Yin, and the overlords Da Peng and Feng Wei are surnamed Peng. The Shang Dynasty also had thirteen surnames, including Tiao, Xu, and Xiao.

  33. Anonymous users2024-01-14

    1.Yan surname: In ancient times, the famous Yan Hui was a person with the surname Yan, but now it is relatively rare for the surname Yan to touch Qi.

    2.Gu surname: Gu Liang was also famous as a politician and military strategist in ancient times, but the number of people with the surname Gu has decreased significantly in modern times.

    3.Chu surname: The surname of Chu Suiliang, a famous calligrapher in the Western Jin Dynasty, is now one of the rarer surnames.

    4.Ruan surname: The Tang Dynasty made Ruan's name very famous, but the Ruan surname is relatively rare.

    5.Shao surname: The pre-Qin book "Shao Feng" records the origin of the Shao surname, which shows that the Shao surname has a long history, but now the Shao surname is no longer common.

    6.Zhong surname: Zhong Li, Zhong Shen and other figures in the pre-Qin history are relatively well-known, but the surname Zhong is now uncommon.

    7.Wei surname: The surname of Wei Zheng, a famous calligrapher of the Wei Dynasty and the Western Jin Dynasty, is relatively rare nowadays.

    In addition, some single-character surnames such as Si, Guan, Li, Lu, etc., have also become relatively rare surnames due to the changes of the times and population succession. Although these surnames have a long history and deep roots, they are relatively few in modern society. It is a relatively precious cultural and historical heritage, which needs to be further studied and excavated.

    The distribution of surnames in contemporary China has changed considerably, many old surnames have become relatively rare, and new surnames are constantly emerging. This reflects the characteristics of the Chinese nation's integration and inclusiveness, and also witnesses the history of migration and social changes in ancient China. One of the directions of humanities research is to continue to study these ancient and rare surnames, explore their historical origins and cultural connotations, and let the history of the Chinese nation get a more comprehensive and in-depth understanding.

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