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Is it more advantageous to have an English name for my career?

I just graduated and enter the job market in Singapore.

I don't have an English name.

My AMDL boss and some of my foreigner colleagues have difficulty in pronouncing my name which is in HanYuPinYin.

Sometimes, I feel that because they have difficulty in pronouncing my name, I am left out of their companionship.

I mean I can understand from their standpoint.

If an Indian introduces himself to me with a name like Venkata Narasimha Rajuvaripeta, I would also say Hi, smile at him but in my heart say Bye, and forget about him too.

Should I just adopt a stylo-milo English name like Oliver or George?

It sounds easy to remember for my AMDL boss and also other foreigner colleagues.

What do you think? Any helpful suggestions?
i think yah should have angmoh name but not anyhow adopt randomly, instead should derive by using your existing name.

e.g. i used to have a colleague called yiwen and she chose phyllis got no link, to me i felt a name like yvonne would make most sense.

so yep that's my suggestion on how u can also come up with a better choice.

I like this idea of having a name that reflects Asian and yet easy to remember for foreigners. Aside from Kim, do you have any other options for me?


Are you suggesting that I should have an English name that resembles my facial and overall body features?


I like your good advice. I am thinking of Philemon. Do you think it's a good name?

Philemon is a good friend of Apostle Paul. Though Philemon is not a common name, it means love or friendliness.


Thank you for your kind advice. It's always advisable to ask for good advice from seniors like you because you guys got the benefit of hindsight.
philemon being not common means might not be easy to remember (or pronounce for those who never heard of it before), and also somehow resembles filament :laugh:
 
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I just graduated and enter the job market in Singapore.

I don't have an English name.

My AMDL boss and some of my foreigner colleagues have difficulty in pronouncing my name which is in HanYuPinYin.

Sometimes, I feel that because they have difficulty in pronouncing my name, I am left out of their companionship.

I mean I can understand from their standpoint.

If an Indian introduces himself to me with a name like Venkata Narasimha Rajuvaripeta, I would also say Hi, smile at him but in my heart say Bye, and forget about him too.

Should I just adopt a stylo-milo English name like Oliver or George?

It sounds easy to remember for my AMDL boss and also other foreigner colleagues.

What do you think? Any helpful suggestions?
English names are easier to remember. I always have problems remembering chinese names. Unless she is a super chio bu. I usually end up just calling them by their family name. Unless your chinese name ends with Ming, Yan, Hock, King or something similar (they can always use that single syllable), it is better to have an English name. Especially in your professional life.

You can consider something catchy like Goldman, Longman, Cocksmith, Einstein, Newton, Elon, Barrack. :biggrin:
 
English names are easier to remember. I always have problems remembering chinese names. Unless she is a super chio bu. I usually end up just calling them by their family name. Unless your chinese name ends with Ming, Yan, Hock, King or something similar (they can always use that single syllable), it is better to have an English name. Especially in your professional life.

You can consider something catchy like Goldman, Longman, Cocksmith, Einstein, Newton, Elon, Barrack. :biggrin:
My surname is Pak. My dialect name is Chew Cheng. You can call me Pak Chew Cheng. 谢谢你.
 
Honkees love having weird and silly English names as they love to stand out from the crowd.

https://www.theatlantic.com/interna...0/hong-kong-loves-weird-english-names/263103/

The most ingenious name I've come across is comedian actor Chapman Toh. When you say his name backwards, you actually saying his name 杜汶泽 in Cantonese.
personally i think a better name (also sounds close to his canto name but without having to reverse) for him would be Macho, especially since he transformed from a geek/ nerd into a muscleman.

other examples of creative (somehow derived instead of just randomly adopted) angmoh names used by chinese-speaking celebrities include:
  • EASON (chen YIXUN)
  • FAYE (wang FEI)
  • GARY (cao GE)
  • JAY (zhou JIElun)
  • JET (li lianJIE)
  • JJ (lin JunJie)
  • KENJI (wu KEQUN)
  • OCEAN (Ou deYANG)
  • SKY (wu SIKAI)
  • WILBUR (pan WEIBO)
  • YOGA (lin YOUJIA)
 
Use Oval Tan

Later your boss mistake you for a can of ovaltine
 
i think yah should have angmoh name but not anyhow adopt randomly, instead should derive by using your existing name.

e.g. i used to have a colleague called yiwen and she chose phyllis got no link, to me i felt a name like yvonne would make most sense.

so yep that's my suggestion on how u can also come up with a better choice.


philemon being not common means might not be easy to remember (or pronounce for those who never heard of it before), and also somehow resembles filament :laugh:

English names are easier to remember. I always have problems remembering chinese names. Unless she is a super chio bu. I usually end up just calling them by their family name. Unless your chinese name ends with Ming, Yan, Hock, King or something similar (they can always use that single syllable), it is better to have an English name. Especially in your professional life.

You can consider something catchy like Goldman, Longman, Cocksmith, Einstein, Newton, Elon, Barrack. :biggrin:

personally i think a better name (also sounds close to his canto name but without having to reverse) for him would be Macho, especially since he transformed from a geek/ nerd into a muscleman.

other examples of creative (somehow derived instead of just randomly adopted) angmoh names used by chinese-speaking celebrities include:
  • EASON (chen YIXUN)
  • FAYE (wang FEI)
  • GARY (cao GE)
  • JAY (zhou JIElun)
  • JET (li lianJIE)
  • JJ (lin JunJie)
  • KENJI (wu KEQUN)
  • OCEAN (Ou deYANG)
  • SKY (wu SIKAI)
  • WILBUR (pan WEIBO)
  • YOGA (lin YOUJIA)
Is John a good name to have. It's pretty neutral?
 
If an Indian introduces himself to me with a name like Venkata Narasimha Rajuvaripeta, I would also say Hi, smile at him but in my heart say Bye, and forget about him too.

The keling would have introduced himself as Raj or Raju or Venk. No hard feelings in asking you to get a nice western name like Bob or Frank.
 
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