Li is second most common surname in China, shared by 92.76 million people. More than 100 million people in Asia bear the surname. Most common surname in Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan. Pronounced as [lej˩˧] in Cantonese, Lí in Taiwanese Hokkien
Turkish citizens were previously known by local names ending in -zade, -oğlu or -gil. Ottoman Empire used titles like Pasha, Hoca, Bey instead of surnames. Turkish MP suggested using "Sanadı" instead of "Soyadı"
König means "king" in German. Transliterations Koenig and Kœnig are used in German and umlaut languages. English commonly uses Koenig surname, sometimes Konig
Harper is an English, Scottish, Irish surname and unisex given name. Name derives from Middle English "harper" or Norman "le Harpur". Also Anglicized from German "Härpfer" meaning "harper"
Hungarian names follow Eastern name order: family name first. Hungarian is one of few European languages using Eastern name order. Many Hungarians still use old spellings like cz for letter c
French names consist of one or multiple given names and a surname. Only one given name is used daily, others for official documents. Middle names and initials are not used