Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - When people ask you "your surname", which surnames are polite, needless to say?

When people ask you "your surname", which surnames are polite, needless to say?

In fact, there were many inexpensive surnames in ancient times, such as the eight surnames in ancient times and the itinerary of emperors in various dynasties at that time. But generally speaking, people surnamed Ji, Zhang and Kong don't have to say "free".

Chinese people are all descendants of China, and the surname of Ji is the surname of Emperor Xuanyuan and one of our earliest ancestors. In the development of later generations, the surname Ji evolved into many other surnames, such as Zhou, Wu, Zheng and Wang, all of which evolved from the surname Ji. It can be said that among hundreds of surnames, 80% of people are all surnamed Ji. So when people ask you what your surname is, when your surname is Ji, you don't have to say that you are free, because Ji's surname represents the ancestors of China.

Needless to say, Zhang is exempt from service, because it is widely rumored that the jade emperor is surnamed Zhang, and the jade emperor is the Lord of the Three Realms, representing the highest rights and honors, so Zhang does not need to add the word exempt from service when he says his name. The same Kong surname, because of this "star effect", needless to say, is also free. The representative of Kong surname is Confucius, the founder of Confucianism. Confucius' Confucianism played a great role in the history of China, which influenced the thoughts of China people in different dynasties, including that we are still learning Confucian culture. Therefore, people surnamed Kong, as descendants of Confucius, do not need to say "free" when answering their surnames.

In fact, modern people don't have so many rules when answering surnames. Modern people have basically abandoned those red tape, but interested friends can look at the history of surnames, which is very interesting.