Submitted by Nakakapag_pabagabag t3_zzeiz7 in explainlikeimfive
We have in our country first name, last name and father's name. there is thing like double name. I heard there are some countries with first name, middle name and last name. there is also four-part names. there is also prepend thingies like "Junior".
how all of this is kept in documents? is my father's name the same thing as middle name? is it being kept in international passport? what about national passports? can i have "more" names, like 6? what does it mean anyway, can i use that for unique identification of person?
frustrated_staff t1_j2b7js2 wrote
Names and naming conventions differ around the world. Documentation of names differs around the world, too. It's really, really culture specific. For example, the United States (default) is 3 names: given name #1, given name #2, and surname, in that order. But, sometimes there are 4 (looking at the Catholics): given, given, religious, and surname or given, religious, given, surname. In Korea, it's surname, given name (inherited), lucky name (Kim Jong Un's surname is Kim and his given name is Un) In Iceland, it's given name and (parents' given name)-son or given name and (parent's given name)-dottir. So Ezra Emmasdottir or Carl Gustavson (as examples).