The Asian Age

POOR The word sounds similar to the sound for a pig eating McD’s Chinese naming nightmare

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Beijing, Oct. 26: McDonald’s in China provoked snorts of laughter Thursday, as internet users mocked a ham-fisted new company name that sounds a lot like the Chinese word for a pig eating.

Earlier this month, the company quietly changed its official name from a transliter­ation of “McDonald’s” to a new moniker meaning “Golden Arches” — a reference to the business’s famous logo.

It was an under-the-radar decision only intended for official use, not for restaurant­s, the company said.

But the move threatened to turn into something of a PR nightmare after an enterprisi­ng Internet user uncovered the change in corporate filings.

Social media wags quickly pointed out the word — gong — sounds similar to one that describes a pig snorting and digging in the dirt for food, or “rooting” in English.

It was an unfortunat­e associatio­n for a restaurant that has long sought to dissociate itself from unhealthy eating habits.

By early Thursday afternoon, the hashtag “Golden Arches” had been viewed 2 million times, with many commenters hamming up its porcine associatio­ns.

“Thank you for ‘snorting’,” one user named “bundled meat” wrote on Weibo, a play on the words McDonald’s servers often use to welcome customers.

“Pig snort snort, golden snort snort, if it’s tasty come snort again,” wrote another user.

Picking a Chinese name can be difficult for foreign corporatio­ns.

Airbnb’s Chinese name “Aibiying” meaning “welcome each other with love” has not gone over well with the Chinese for its phonetic clunkiness.

Max Factor, the cosmetics company, chose a name that to some Chinese sounds like “a buddha wrapped in honey.”

Coca-cola is one company that got it right, transliter­ating its English name to “kekou kele” meaning “Happiness you can taste.”

A McDonald’s China spokeswoma­n said in a statement on Thursday that the company’s new name is purely a formality.

“The company’s name is only for registrati­on purposes,” the statement said.

“It will have no effect on normal business operations.”

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