• @[email protected]
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    511 year ago

    We should go back to using profession as last name. Then everybody would be named Shitposter.

  • @[email protected]
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    241 year ago

    I believe this is a thing in Quebec.

    from https://culturalatlas.sbs.com.au/canadian-culture/canadian-culture-naming


    In Quebec, the Civil Code requires parents to assign their child only one surname (either a single or compound surname) derived from their respective surnames. Compound surnames may not have more than two parts, with or without hyphens. Thus, a couple named Joseph BOUCHARD-TREMBLAY and Marie DION-ROY could give their children the surnames:

    • BOUCHARD
    • TREMBLAY
    • DION
    • ROY
    • BOUCHARD-TREMBLAY
    • DION-ROY
    • BOUCHARD-DION
    • BOUCHARD-ROY, and so on.

    In Quebec, the law provides that spouses retain their respective birth names when they are married.

  • @[email protected]
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    191 year ago

    In the Hispanic tradition it would be the Paternal name and then the Maternal name using the Paternal line, which would be the first name.

    So Male 1-2 and Female 3-4 becomes Baby 1-3.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      Some of the Mexicans I know just kept adding middle names.

      You end up with something like Manuèl José Alvarez Ibarra Reyes Gutierrez

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      11 year ago

      Baby 1-4?

      I thought maternal name always come seconds and gets passed down by the mom.

      So the dad has “dad1-mom1” and the mom has “dad2-mom2”.

      And the kid would be “dad1-mom2”. Not “dad1-dad2”

      But I honestly don’t know

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    1 year ago

    I read an article about this a few years ago, and the answer is whatever they want. I remember one couple said they just decided they liked the wife’s grandmother’s maiden name, so they just picked that. She was confused but flattered.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        I know a few people who’ve done this. When they got married they decided they didn’t like either last name so just chose a new one. In one case it was the guy’s online handle - which was also a normal last name. In the other case it was a name from their favourite movie.

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    61 year ago

    In Canada, they typically pick one or two last names out of four for the kid. Some adults decide to go by just one of their last names too

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    21 year ago

    You talk about it and decide together.

    In our case we both kept our last names. Why change her last name when that’s who she’s always been? Really simplifies things as far as paperwork goes. Also - LPT: when you have different last names you can get double the introductory offers on things like internet packages at home. Just sign up under one name, cancel when able, sign up under the other. They don’t know you’re married.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        Great idea! That’s another couple of accounts you can open up, and maybe even a few credit lines when both the parents have used theirs up.

        Kidding obviously, because this place gets pretty rough sometimes.

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          11 year ago

          I mainly ask, because when I worked in an armory there was a dude named ‘GonzalezLamas-Suarez’ whose name I had to handwrite on a very small line every single time I signed him out gear. It was the smallest font I’d ever seen on a uniform before.

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            11 year ago

            Then you have those weird ones like “de Jesus” where it just doesn’t make sense to be to have a preposition as part of your last name.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            Same for my brother ha. His superiors actually just shorten it to one word when talking to him if it isn’t super official.

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    11 year ago

    Latino person here with two last names.

    I chose to keep both of mine, but when I married I only kept the first.

    We also commonly only use the first in spite of having both in our ID

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    11 year ago

    I’ve always thought the system of last names should be hyphenated. Your paternal last name first, maternal last name second. Women no longer change their names when marrying. Men pass the paternal name down to their kids, women pass down the maternal. That way last names are essentially a record of who your OG matrons and patrons are.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      That’s how it is in some cultures. I have my father’s paternal last name and my mother’s maternal last name.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 year ago

    Haha have you ever seen an Indian person, especially a man’s ID? Not exaggerating, it’s around 5-7 last names of something. Feel free to correct me but as a bartender, it could be both funny and irritating when verifying their ID.