Chop translation
May. 25th, 2010 04:01 pmI have a Chinese chop, in traditional characters. It is possible that it contains my name in Chinese (Szu Sung-Eh), or it could be something else entirely ("licensed prostitute"). I can no longer write my Chinese name, but I think I would recognize it if hand written, and certainly the last symbol doesn't look like anything I recognize (that and my name is three parts, not four).
Below the cut are images of the stamp/print, and the chop itself. Click for bigger.
Print

Chop (since it is a stamp, it is backwards of how it prints)

If you know what it says, please enlighten me.
Edit: A mirror image of the chop and further discussion can be found here.
Below the cut are images of the stamp/print, and the chop itself. Click for bigger.

Chop (since it is a stamp, it is backwards of how it prints)

If you know what it says, please enlighten me.
Edit: A mirror image of the chop and further discussion can be found here.
no subject
Date: 2010-05-31 02:20 am (UTC)The story of Chinese "fonts" is long and involved, and I only know the bare basics. I refer you to the wikipedia article on Chinese characters for a gloss -- it's a bit long and doesn't focus on what you're asking about, but it can be a place to start.
As for traditional and simplified, yes, you could consider them to be just different fonts. The characters within the different fonts sometimes have a 1-to-1 correlation and sometimes don't with each other, depending on historical context. For example, most of the characters that are found on the ancient oracle bones (3000 years ago) are no longer used. However, a few have evolved into characters that we still use today; they just look different (but you can still see the evolution clearly when you look at the intermediate fonts). And we have no idea how speakers then actually pronounced those words. In the present day, simplified Chinese was promoted in the 50s in Communist China as an attempt to raise literacy. It took many traditional characters and simplified them. A character that might have required 15 strokes might now only require 7. Some of these simplifications resulted in the same character. So two characters that are written differently in the traditional font -- behind and queen, for example -- are written using the same character in the simplified font. So I suppose that's not a 1-1 ratio, because without context, you wouldn't know if this character refers to a queen or being behind something.
Your chop font is almost certainly a form of 篆书, which seems to have been standardized during the reign of the First Emperor (200 BCE or so). Names are generally semi-rare characters that are still in use but aren't going to be everywhere (to prevent the equivalent of having 100 "John Lee"s in a city, for example). My family name is well known (yours might not be, since it's a transliteration), the first character of my given name is common, but the final character of my given name is a historical variant of the character that is now in common use to mean "tranquil." Some Chinese people have to ask me how to pronounce my name, and this is not an odd thing to happen in general.