Resultado-kuéra nf-pe g̃uarã
Umi documento tembiasakue rehegua ojejuhúva Nf-pe g̃uarã
Umi documento tembiasakue rehegua ha’e umi documento oikuaaukáva umi detalle imba´eguasuvéva umi mba'e ojehúva peteĩ tapicha rekovépe. Eñemoaranduve
| Ta’anga | Téra | Evento-kuéra | Rrelasiõnguéra |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() | N*f J* | Teñói 1857 Ñemano 22 June 1945 | Ndaipóri rrelasiõ oĩva lista-pe |
![]() | *nf István | Teñói 8 December 1900 | Túva / Ru *nf Sándor Sy Reiehenfeld Lina |
![]() | N N F | Ñemano 18 April 1984 | Ndaipóri rrelasiõ oĩva lista-pe |
![]() | Liatas N F | Residencia / Tenda orresidihaguépe 1926 Goleta, Santa Barbara, California, United States | Ndaipóri rrelasiõ oĩva lista-pe |
Arbol Familiar perfil-kuéra ojetopa Nf-pe g̃uarã
Ko’ãva ikatu ha’e nde ypykue ambue puruharakuéra omoĩmava Árbol Familiar komunidape. Eñemoaranduve
Terajoapy/Apellido informasiõ ojetopa Nf-pe g̃uarã
Nf
(1997: 406;2007: 1686; 2010: NA) Some characteristic forenames: Korean Sung, Kwang, Sang, Seung, Byung, Chong, Jae Eun, Jin, Song, Chang, Chul, Hong, Hyo, Seong, Yong, Yoon, Young, Young Man, Chong Ho, Chong Sik, Dong In, Doyoung, Hae. Korean: there is only one Chinese character for the Na surname. Some sources indicate that there are 46 different Na clans, but only two of them can be documented, and it is believed that these two sprang from a common founding ancestor. The Na clan's founding ancestor, Na Pu, migrated from China sometime during the mid seventh century and settled in the Naju area. Chinese: Mandarin form of the surname 那, meaning ‘that’ in Chinese: (i) from Na (那), the name of a state (located in present-day Hebei province) during the Spring and Autumn period (770–476 BC ), established by the migrants from the state of Quan due to the war launched by the state of Chu. (ii) traced back to minority ethnic groups in China such as Manchus, who adopted Na (那) as their Han Chinese surname. Chinese: Mandarin form of the surname 納: (i) a surname of the Hui ethnic group, said to be traced back to Nasr al-Din (died 1292 AD , translated into Chinese as Na Su La Ding:納速剌丁), a provincial governor of Yunnan and of Shaanxi during the Yuan dynasty, and also the eldest son of the famous official Sayyid Ajall Shams al-Din Omar al-Bukhari (1211–1279). (ii) adopted as a Han Chinese surname from other minority ethnic groups in China. Chinese: variant Romanization of the surname 藍, see Lan 1.
Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.
Nf ojejuhu jepive ramo United States-pe ha mokõi ambue tetãme.
Ikatu roguereko hetave informasiõ ndéve g̃uarã.
Eñeha’ã eheka ko’ã ambue mba’épe.
Mandu'akuéra
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