Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - Are the moon and stars named?

Are the moon and stars named?

All right.

Xěng (pinyin: xοng) is a first-class Chinese character (commonly used word) in the General Standard of Chinese, which first appeared in Oracle Bone Inscriptions in Shang Dynasty. "Star" originally refers to a bright little star in the night sky, and later refers to a single star.

Ancient "stars" include modern "stars", "planets", "meteors" and "comets". Stars are tiny points in the night sky, so the word "star" also refers to tiny things, such as sweating stars and spitting stars.

Because meteors shine brightly when they cross the sky, "star" is extended to people who have made special contributions or special talents in a certain field, such as singers, movie stars and stars. Also used as a surname.

"Moon" is a commonly used Chinese character, which was first seen in Oracle Bone Inscriptions in Shang Dynasty. Its original meaning is the natural satellite of the earth, namely the moon. The ancients created the "moon" according to the law of the moon's profit and loss, which is still in use today. It also refers to something shaped like the moon, which appears or completes once a month.

"Moon" is a common radical, with "Moon" as the radical. One is related to the moon, such as the new moon, the moon and the DPRK. There is also an evolution from "meat", which has nothing to do with the moon, such as elbows, stomach, lungs and fat.

The obvious influence of name on behavior is mostly attributed to the so-called implicit egocentric effect: we are generally attracted to people and things that are most similar to ourselves.

But this view may not stand up to careful scrutiny. Yuri simonson, a psychologist at the University of Pennsylvania, questioned many studies that claimed to support the implicit egocentric effect. He believes that these research results are statistical accidents caused by poor research methods.

However, the name effect may not exist or just need to be reinterpreted. Names actually send some signals.