Rome had an interesting naming convention where the more names you had the more powerful you were names were like inventory slots for accessories, they denoted who you were, where you were from, who in your family has done something cool, ect. They honestly operate a deliciously lot like how scientific names work.
Most Romans had two maybe three names, Romans from prestigious families or money usually had four. so like a noble might have personal name (nomen), family name (gens), famous ancestors name (patronimicus), clan name (cognomen), and if they've done something cool they'll have a nickname - whereas a common person probably just has nomen, gens and (if their family is from Italy) a cognomen
but you do run into an inflation problem
All to say that there was one emperor who's name was, I shit you not, "Lucius Aelius Aurelius Commodus Avustus Hercules Romanus Exsuperatorius Amazoniue Invictus Felix Pius"
