• @[email protected]
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    135 days ago

    with hyphenated names: what would the children do then? you can’t keep adding more and more names like that (both practically and legally in some cases). serious question because I’ve also thought about that

    • @dingus
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      5 days ago

      I think it varies with culture, but from my understanding, usually they take the first name of the two hyphens for their own marriage.

      So you have John Doe and Jane Smith. They hyphenate their names as Doe-Smith and the children do as well.

      Say they have a daughter Sally Doe-Smith who meets Tim Johnson-Star. So they marry and hyphenate their names as Johnson-Doe. Both Smith and Star get dropped.

      Yes, in examples like this, it still ends up as getting rid of the maternal aspect of the lineage in the very end…but the point is still that both parties are keeping part of and changing another part of their names. It’s not an all or nothing total switch of identity. The lineage is male, but the here and now is an equal compromise of identity.

        • @dingus
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          45 days ago

          Maybe not quite, but iml it’s certainly leaps and bounds better that altering your identity entirely in submission of a partner.

    • @trolololol
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      55 days ago

      You clearly haven’t met Brazilians

    • @phcorcoran
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      25 days ago

      In Canada, you legally pick up to 2 of your parents’ last names for your last name

      • @[email protected]
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        4 days ago

        In Soviet Russia you pick a last name. Any last name. Except containing numbers, non-letters, more than one hyphen, rank or job title.

    • @[email protected]
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      25 days ago

      My name is Maximus Decimus Arnold Garfield Butcher Smith Hendrickson Meridius, and you shall have my name.