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2011-11-08 | |
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Posted by:Fred |
#8 I knew a Vietnamese whose name is "Nguyen Nguyen." Pronounced Win-Win as I understand it. |
Posted by: JohnQC 2011-11-08 17:03 |
#7 Nguyen was the VN Imperial Family's name. |
Posted by: mojo 2011-11-08 10:35 |
#6 and don't even get me started with the Viet Namese and "Nguyen" |
Posted by: Frank G 2011-11-08 09:36 |
#5 There are only about 250 Korean family names currently in use, and the three most common (Kim, Lee, and Park) account for nearly half of the population. - source Had a Kim 1, Kim 2 and Kim 3 for KATUSAs in my unit. IIRC at one time S.Korea had a law at one time that prohibited marriage between individuals with the same family name to avoid 'genetic' issues, but it was eventually 'clarified' since nearly half the population was composed of those three cited names. |
Posted by: Procopius2k 2011-11-08 08:08 |
#2 Do you mean this article from yesterday, jvalentour? At midnight Rantburg rolls over to a new day and new articles, the previous day's article links and discussion threads being accessible in the archives. The articles themselves, with inline commentary, cannot be generally seen, a response to the whole R1ghth4ven fiasco, unless one contacts Mr. Pruitt directly for permission. I've had to do that several times over the years. If you mean something else, please do explain. |
Posted by: trailing wife 2011-11-08 01:09 |
#1 So... You dropped the Yon article? |
Posted by: jvalentour 2011-11-08 00:45 |