What country has the best names/name structure?
What country has the best names/name structure?
>Savchenko
>russian
Italian, spanish and japabnese names sound the most pleasing to my ear
Italian and Japanese names sound the best.
Portugal and Spain since they're the only ones who actually have the last name of both parents
The japanese ones are the more diverse even if they rarely have more than 2 names and never sound like they don't mix together.It amazes me though,how much different italian,french,portuguese and spanish are so different from eachother
Are iberian names the only ones that have them both?
Middle name is shit
I feel it eerie
Probably because it has no middle name in Japan
All european name looks same
Do you know what else rooks the same? :^)
i think so
italian and japanese names. (generally) shorter and simple to pronounce
>mfw I have a second name and it's shit
Here's a perfectly legal portuguese name
Ana Rita Carolina Mariana Silva Soares
this
this
Is Russia has some ties with Spain or something? Why using russian names in Spain?
It was a joke.
America
>Kaylenn Smith
>Megyn Hedgepath
>Kathrynn Jones
>Kylie Vaughn
>Lulu Turner
>Avery Montgomery
What name in the spanish part is even russian?
Sweden's sound the most serious and respectable. All other names look like pornstars.
Iceland
this
spain
>Blanca Nieves
If anybody actually called their daughter that they would be such assholes.
kek
Italian, Japanese, and French sound the best desu
Eloise or Heloise sound like “pervert” in Japanese.
it's a tradition, gotta make the name remarkable
In villages and the countryside it's not uncommon to find some jewels
I don't really like french names sometimes, they look too innocent
Slovenia desu. We have names, surnames and house names (at least in the countryside). And the house name stays with the house so someone else can move in and he will still be known by the same house name. Also, people often receive nicknames that go together with the house name so it's not unusual for people in a village to not know someone's actual name and surname but immediately knowing when the person is refered to by the house name and nickname. Also, it's common to refer to people not just by their surname or house name but by making it a possessive (Smith's) and to literally asking someone "Whose are you" when asking who he is.
that is commonplace in rural world, although people (normaly) don't make those names official (in particular because some are just woeful)
for instance, my house beared the name of a part of the old city fields, the neighbours to side were lake, on the other side of the road you had bakers and shitters, a bit up the road there were scouts, marsh and roaches.
Nowadays those names have little use since there is no need to keep that tradition to diferenciate betwen the locals from the huge migrant wave (portguguese from other elsewhere, it went from 900 people to 8 000 in about 40 years, industrialization is to blame). The locals still have their family homes and are in concentrated in the old part while the migrant descendants populate the low-class neighbourhoods, often rented because their parents blew their hard-earned money in frivolous stuff
Italy is one of the nations with most surname variety. Fuck.
Anyway, top 15 surnames
ROSSI
RUSSO
FERRARI
BIANCHI
ESPOSITO
COLOMBO
ROMANO
GALLO
RICCI
GRECO
CONTI
MARINO
DE LUCA
COSTA
BRUNO
Giuro di aver conosciuto solo una o due persone con quei cognomi.
we have them too.
t.山田山崎
Io essendo in una grande città di cui non dirò il nome (uè testina uè pistola) praticamente tutti
DO SOLEIRO PINTO DE LA MADRIO CORTEO
Litarally 1/4 of them can be also iberian surnames