Yes
In Cantonese, the name Sabrina is spelled as 莎碧娜 or 沙宾娜.
Tran is a Vietnamese surname. It is the Vietnamese version of the Chinese surname Chen (Mandarin) or Chan (Cantonese).
The Cantonese pronunciation of the name "Yu Heng" in Hanyu Pinyin is "Yu Hang" (余恒).
In Cantonese, "my name is" can be translated as "ngóh daaih mihng" (我係名) or "ngóh dih woh mihng" (我啲嘅名).
In Cantonese, "king" is pronounced as "王" (wong4).
(Cantonese) Chinese from Hong Kong
Its Chinese... the cantonese version of Tan in Manderine.
The song is called: Who Am I (Cantonese theme)
Au is usually a Chinese last name of 歐. More specifically it's the romanization of the Cantonese pronunciation of that last name. There's also a chance that people with this last name would have originated in Hong Kong.
Cantonese comes from the Guangdong province.
A Vietnamese last name, has chinese origins relating to that of Ng in Cantonese and Wu in Mandrin, all meaning corn the vegetable. About 1.3% of Vietnamese have this last name. Pronounced as "No" in english. Famous people having this last name include Ngo Dinh Diem a South Vietnamese President
In Cantonese, the name Sabrina is spelled as 莎碧娜 or 沙宾娜.
"ocean shore" is just "shore" in Cantonese. 海岸 = hoi on However, some restaurants with the same name as "Ocean's Shore" usually do not have the same exact Chinese name. They're usually called something different in Cantonese.
Tran is a Vietnamese surname. It is the Vietnamese version of the Chinese surname Chen (Mandarin) or Chan (Cantonese).
The Cantonese pronunciation of the name "Yu Heng" in Hanyu Pinyin is "Yu Hang" (余恒).
In Cantonese, "my name is" can be translated as "ngóh daaih mihng" (我係名) or "ngóh dih woh mihng" (我啲嘅名).
The last name of Luke or Lucas originates from several different European countries: it can't be situated without knowing a bit more about your family history. In addition, "Luke" is a spelling of a common Cantonese name and/or Vietnamese name--so it could come from there, too.