Home Contents Search

2Amy.com To Amy

zhang
Similar   Websites
Premium 2
Premium 3
Premium 4
Premium 5
Premium 6
LLLLL.com
LLLLL.com 2
LLLLL.com 3
Acronym 10
Acronym 2
Acronym 3
Acronym 4
Acronym 5
Premium
Rare domains
Acronym 6
Acronym 7
Acronym 8
Acronym 9
cities_realestate
education_sites
entertainment_sites
games
misc_sites
LLLL.com Site
Brandable sites
Pin Yin sites
service_sites
technology
Acronym sites
Payment Options
About Our Office

Amy, the future up coming new star. Sister site is Adrienne Fan Site AdrienneZ.com. Brother site is Stephen Zhang StephenZhang.com 

 ekatarina.com ekatarina fan site

 

Amy is a given name, a variant of "Aimée", which means beloved in French, from Old French amede, from Latin amāta, feminine singular past participle of amāre "to love". the name may also originate from French Ami, which means friend.

Amy can also be a diminutive of "Amelia". Amelia is derived from a separate root word, the Germanic amal, "to work."

Famous people with the given name Amy
Amy Acker, an actress
Amy Adams, American actress
Amy Blackmur, a radio presenter on Australian youth radio station Triple J
Amy Brenneman, an actress appearing in Heat and Daylight
Amy Carmichael, missionary to India
Amy Carter, political activist and daughter of Jimmy Carter
Amy Dumas, former WWE Diva and lead singer of The Luchagors
Amy Grant, contemporary pop singer
Amy Feng, U.S. Table Tennis team
Amy Irving, American actress
Amy Johnson, a noted English aviatrix
Amy Jo Johnson, an actress
Amy Klobuchar, United States senator from Minnesota
Amy Lee, the lead singer of Evanescence
Amy Lowell, poet
Amy Palant, an American voice actress
Amy Poehler, an actress and Saturday Night Live player
Amy Ray, singer with the Indigo Girls
Amy Smart, an actress
Amy Studt, a singer
Amy Tan, writer
Amy Winehouse, a singer
Amy, former valet on WWE Friday Night SmackDown!

Fictional
Amy Barone, a character in the TV sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond
Amy Madison, a character from Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Amy March, a character in Little Women
Amy Rose, a character in the Sonic the Hedgehog series of video games
Amy Sorel, a character from the Soul series of fighting games
Amy Wong, a character in the animated sci-fi series Futurama
Amy Gray, The main character from "Judging Amy"
 

Zhang (Simplified Chinese: 张; Traditional Chinese: 張; Pinyin: Zhāng) is among the most common Chinese surnames. In the 1990 edition of Guinness Book of Records, it was listed as the world's most common surname, with over 100 million people worldwide with this surname. It was also ranked third in the People's Republic of China by the Chinese Academy of Sciences in early 2006. The use of this surname dates back to about 4,700 years ago.

Zhang is pronounced and transliterated in a variety of ways. In Mandarin Chinese it is Pinyin: Zhāng, Wade-Giles: Chang, Tongyong Pinyin: Jhāng. In Cantonese it is Yale: Jèung, Jyutping: Zoeng1, Hong Kong Government: Cheung. In Minnan, it is Pe̍h-oē-jī: Tiuⁿ, in Southeast Asia where a variety of dialects are spoken: Teo or Teoh in the Minnan/Teochew dialects, Chong in Hakka, Cheong in Cantonese and many other spellings based on the Romanisation of the Chinese dialects used. The corresponding Korean surname is 장 which is frequently transliterated as Jang or Chang. Some confusion arises with the surnames Zhuang (莊) and Jiang (蔣) that are also written as 장 in Korean, and which are also frequently transliterated as Jang or Chang. The corresponding Vietnamese version is Trương.

Another Zhang, 章, is a less common surname which also has the same pronunciation of Zhāng in Mandarin, Cheung in Cantonese, and Jang in Korean. However, this name is pronounced differently in Minnan (Chiong) than Tiuⁿ (張). Likewise, the Vietnamese can clearly distinguish this name, pronounced Chương, from Trương (張).

Character analysis The character (張) comprises 弓 (gōng -- a bow used in warfare) and 长 (cháng or zhǎng -- "length" "long" or "to grow," though it is probably the latter that contributes to the notion of an expanding bow). Appropriately, the ancient form of this character uses 巨 (jù -- huge, towering) in place of 长, thereby suggesting an even more concrete idea; this form is considered today to be that of an ancient variant which has since faded from everyday usage. Zhāng's literal translation is "to open forth", or "to spread", although its common use is a measure word for (relatively) flat objects such as paper and mattresses.

 

Contact Information

Call our office today to set up an appointment. Learn more about how we can help you, and learn more about the other services that we can offer you. All messages we receive will be answered as soon as possible. We look forward to hearing from you.

Electronic mail
General Information: emailto:  sales@engineerpartner.com
 

Copyright © 2006 2amy.com                    Powered by Engineer Partner The One Stop Outsource