>(first name) + (mother's surname) + (father's surname)
Why is it so hard for white people to adopt this naming structure? Do they hate their mothers or what?
>(first name) + (mother's surname) + (father's surname)
Why is it so hard for white people to adopt this naming structure? Do they hate their mothers or what?
Other urls found in this thread:
pt.wikipedia.org
twitter.com
Thats retarded because every time it multiplies by 4 and in the end you will have something like paco chavez ramirez valencia loco doco poco coco etc
You only inherit the last surname of your mother and father, it doesn't multiply.
Wypipo are subhuman, don't even bother
If your kids name didn't exist before 1850, you aren't wh*Te
Hmm sorry but I only need my surname and my family nickname
what's wrong with (first name) + (father's surname) + (mother's surname)?
and what happens with your kid? do you pass on you mothers of fathers surname?
(first name) + (fathers name + son) + (mothers last name) = based
because men have a divine right over women
First name + father's name is the only proper way.
Wifes take their husband's names anyway, so it really is the only way.
>If your kids name didn't exist in Europe before christianity, you aren't wh*Te.
FTFY
I only pass my last surname, which I got from my father.
and the woman? she passes on her mothers of fathers surname?
anyways, I think it's a superior system to ours, I like it
not how it works.
whichever you want, the kid gets 1 surname from mom and another one from dad
If the child has children, will their names be (first name) +(mother's mother's surname) +(mother's father's surname) + (father's mother's surname) + (father's father's surname)?
dont you think everyone would have over 20 surnames by now?
The woman passes her last surname, the one she got from her father
They don't?
>his last name is not an honorable profession like Miller or Smith
Law changed a bit. Now you inherit one surname from the father, another from the mother; but the order and which one don't matter.
So e.g. you can have both surnames from your grandmas, or have your mother name coming last.
>First name + Middle name that may reference someone in your tree + Paternal last name
Only correct answer, everyone else is subhuman.
yep
this way is how I neatly arranged my 16 surnames (4 generations)
Of course, legally here in Spain you are allowed a max of two first names and two surnames.
Deconstruyete macho opresor
>16 surnames
Nigger how does your society even function
I do. I also hate her father.
>implying African societies function
I think surnames should be earned, NPCs don't deserve them
Jesus fuck, that's awesome on its way.
I only did it because I wanted to know how my great-great grandparents surnames would be ordered, I don't go around telling people my 16 surnames and legally you aren't allowed to have more than two.
ironic
>16 surnames
>ironic
Latin America doesn't work either, moor.
Look at Japan
Is a Male chauvinism country
I don't have to say that you all know
do you hate your grandparents or what?
So how do you pick the surname for your kid? Using your father's surname or mother's surname? or whatever you want? I think it should be the former but it's worth to confirm.
I don't know in Spain, but at least here, now you're allowed to pick either. I had to check it here because I plan to pick my mother's surname for my kids.
Usāmah bin Muḥammad bin Awaḍ bin Lādin
Here in Spain, the child inherits both the father's first surname and the mother's first surname. Usually it was always the father's surname first and then the mother's surname, but recently the law was changed so the parents can decide which surname would be first for their child, either the father's or the mother's one. This means that, legally, everyone here has a first name, an (optional) second name, and two surnames.
For example, you have a father named José Pepe Ortega Alcántara, and the mother named María Eugenia Medina Gomez
Their child would be [First name] [Optional middle name] Ortega Medina, or Medina Ortega, depending on the surname's order decided by both parents.
>Optional middle name
Spaniards can have a compound given name, which is not the same as a middle name. Middle names are the norm in Anglo-Saxon countries, whereas compound given names are entirely optional in Spanish-speaking countries.
Woah that's cool. Thanks lads for the information.
yeah that, I didn't know the exact name in english
Trying to find more famous people with big ass names like this
The most logical would be first name + mother's something.
At that point you're just doing it to show off.
>Pedro de Alcântara Francisco António João Carlos Xavier de Paula Miguel Rafael Joaquim José Gonzaga Pascoal Cipriano Serafim de Bragança e Bourbon
pt.wikipedia.org
First emperor of Brazil