From the launch of the Minolta SR system (1958) to the advent of the MD lenses (1977), Minolta lens names would be followed by a two-letter combination that (to those in the know) described the optical recipe of the lens. Hence lenses would have names such as: AUTO TELE ROKKOR-QE, MC W.ROKKOR-NL or MC W.ROKKOR-HH
The first of those characters describes the number of lens groups the lens design employed, according to table 1 below (the origin of the character was based on a combination of Latin and Greek),
| Num. groups | Code | Greek | Latin |
| 3 | T | treis | tres |
| 4 | Q | tettares | quattuor |
| 5 | P | pente | quinque |
| 6 | H | hex | sex |
| 7 | S | hepta | septem |
| 8 | O | oktoo | octo |
| 9 | N | ennea | novem |
The second part of that two-character code would signify the number of lens elements and was based on the latin alphabet
| Num. elements | Code |
| 3 | C |
| 4 | D |
| 5 | E |
| 6 | F |
| 7 | G |
| 8 | H |
| 9 | I |
| 10 | J |
| 11 | K |
| 12 | L |