Chang (surname)
Romanization | Zhang, Chang, Jang, Jhang (Mandarin) Cheung (Hong Kong) Cheong (Macao) Tsan, Tsaon (Shanghai) Teo, Teoh (Hokkien, Teochew) Chong (Hakka) Thong, Cheong (Gan) Trương, Trang (Vietnamese) Jang, Chang (장) (Korean) |
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Pronunciation | IPA: /tʂɑŋ˥/ (Mandarin IPA) Zhāng (Pinyin) Tiuⁿ (Pe̍h-ōe-jī) |
Language(s) | Chinese, Vietnamese, Korean |
Origin | |
Language(s) | Old Chinese |
Derivation | State of Zhang |
Meaning | drawing a bow,[1] archer, bowyer |
Origin | |
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Word/name | Old Chinese |
Region of origin | China |
Chang (/tʃɑːŋ/) is the pinyin romanization of the Chinese surname 常 (Cháng). It was listed 80th among the Song-era Hundred Family Surnames.
"Chang" is also the Wade-Giles romanization of two Chinese surnames written Zhang in pinyin: one extremely common and written 張 in traditional characters and 张 in simplified characters, and another quite rare and written as 章 in both systems. There is also a rare case of 鄭 in Hong Kong written as Chang as well. For full details on them, see the "Zhang" 章 and "Zheng" 鄭 article. In Macao, this is the spelling of the surname "Zeng" 曾.
Romanization
常 is romanized as Ch'ang in Wade-Giles, although the apostrophe is often omitted in practice. It is romanized as Soeng and Sheung in Cantonese; Seong and Siông in Minnan languages; and Sioh in Teochew. It is occasionally romanized Sōng and Thōng as well.[citation needed]
It is the source of the Vietnamese surname Thường. The Korean surname romanized as Sang (상). In Japanese, it is romanized as Jō.
Distribution
常 was unlisted among the most recent rankings of the 100 most common Chinese surnames in mainland China and on Taiwan based on household registrations in 2007, although the Ministry of Public Security in 2008 listed is as the 87th most common surname in China based on its database of National Identity Cards, shared by at least 2.4 million Chinese citizens.[2] It was the 94th-most-common surname during the 1982 Chinese census.
张 is the third-most-common surname in mainland China, making up 6.83% of the population of the People's Republic of China, although there it is official rendered into the Latin alphabet as Zhang.[3] Its Traditional Chinese variant 張 is the fourth-most-common surname in Taiwan, making up 5.26% of the population of the Republic of China.[4]
"Chang" is a common Chinese surname in the United States, ranked 687th among all surnames during the 1990 census and 424th during the year 2000 census.[5] It was ranked 11th among all surnames held by Asians and Pacific Islanders and 6th among all surnames held by Chinese Americans in 2000, well ahead of the pinyin variant "Zhang".[6]
Origin
The pronunciation of Chang in Old Chinese has been reconstructed as *daŋ. Its original meaning was "constant" or "often". By the time of Middle Chinese, the pronunciation had shifted to Dzyang.[1]
List of persons with the surname
- 張 and 张
- Angela Chang, Taiwanese singer and actress.
- Chang Chen-yue or "A-Yue", Taiwanese rock musician.
- Chang Fei or "Fei Ge", Taiwanese television personality.
- Chen Chung Chang, mathematician
- Deserts Chang, Taiwanese singer/songwriter.
- Edmond E-min Chang (born 1970), Taiwanese American former lawyer and current federal district judge for northern Illinois, appointed by President Obama in 2010
- Eileen Chang (1920–1995), Chinese writer.
- Chang Hui-mei or "A-mei", aboriginal Taiwanese singer and occasional songwriter.
- Iris Chang (1968–2004), American historian and journalist.
- Ivan Miranda Chang, Peruvian tennis player.
- Jeff Chang, Taiwanese singer.
- José Antonio Chang, Peruvian politician.
- Jung Chang, Chinese writer and author of Wild Swans.
- Chang Kai-chen (born 1991), Taiwanese tennis player
- Kathleen Chang, birth name of Kathy Change, a political activist who committed suicide by self-immolation at the University of Pennsylvania in 1996
- Meiyang Chang, Chinese Indian television artist
- Michael Te-Pei Chang (born 1972), Chinese American tennis player
- Peng Chun Chang (1892–1957), Chinese professor, philosopher, and playwright who played a pivotal role in drafting the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
- Phil Chang, Taiwanese singer-songwriter and television personality.
- Shi-Kuo Chang, Taiwanese computer scientist and science fiction author.
- Victor Chang (1936–1991), Chinese-Australian cardiac surgeon
- Chang Yu-sheng (1966–1997), Taiwanese singer, composer, and producer.
- 常
- Chang Yuchun (1330–1369), a Ming general
- 章
- John Chiang, a Taiwanese politician formerly surnamed "Chang".
- Fictional Characters
- Chang, a henchman in the James Bond film Moonraker played by the Franco-Japanese aikido instructor Toshiro Suga
- Cho Chang, a character in the Harry Potter novels officially Sinified as 张秋 (Zhang Qiu), sometimes alternately claimed by Cantonese Caos or even Korean Chos
- Leia Chang, a character in the television show Degrassi: The Next Generation played by the Chinese-Canadian actress Judy Jiao
- Mike Chang, a Chinese-American character in the TV series Glee, played by Chinese-Latin American actor Harry Shum Junior
- Tina Cohen-Chang, a Chinese-American character in the TV series Glee, played by Korean-American actress Jenna Ushkowitz
- Chang Chong-Chen, a character in the The Adventures of Tintin series, inspired by Hergé's real-life friend Zhang Chongren
See also
References
- ^ a b Baxter, Wm. H. & Sagart, Laurent. Template:PDFlink, p. 33. 2011. Accessed 11 October 2011.
- ^ "中国最新300大姓排名(2008 [Statistics on the number of citizens with each surname in China, based on records of National Identity Cards]." 2009-01-06. Accessed 20 Jun 2015.Template:Zh icon
- ^ "公安部统计:'王'成中国第一大姓 有9288万人 [Public Security Bureau Statistics: 'Wang' Found China's #1 'Big Family', Includes 92.88m People]." 24 Apr 2007. Accessed 27 Mar 2012.Template:Zh icon
- ^ 中华百家姓-千字文-国学经典-文化经典. "中国台湾姓氏排行 [Taiwan (China) Surname Ranking]". 8 Jun 2010. Accessed 1 Apr 2012. Template:Zh icon
- ^ US Census Bureau. Public Broadcasting Service. "How Popular Is Your Last Name?" Accessed 6 Apr 2012.
- ^ United States Census Bureau. "Genealogy Data: Frequently Occurring Surnames from Census 2000". 27 Sept 2011. Accessed 29 Mar 2012.