Yuri isn’t a German name. I don’t know the law if they keep their Japanese nationality and only live there temporary vs. they have moved there to stay and maybe have dual or German citizenship.
However, the usual solution is “pick more” - take the first name as normal German female name, and the second Yuri.
You can choose four or more first names, and there is no legal first name you’re required to always use, so if the parents pick several names, the child can choose which one she likes best.
No, it was not issued at birth 50 years ago, but you are required to have one before you can get a job. All financial records, tax records, and hospital records are by SSN.
As far as shopping goes, no you do not give your SSN to Amazon or any other store unless they are sending you money. To put eBooks up for sale on Amazon, I did have to give them my SSN.
Let’s see, constanze, just using this thread as my cite, I have:
I think you’re missing something. I can only speak for Quebec, but here at least, you can change your name, although to do it officially, you have to submit an application and pay a fee. What you don’t get is a free name change to your husband’s if you’re a woman who gets married. You could still change it if you so want, but you have to go the whole name change process. (Or you can just use your husband’s name as a social custom, without it becoming your official name. But I think that’s becoming very uncommon.)
I assume similar things are true in the other countries on your list. And remember that restrictions on what parents can name their child aren’t necessarily the same as restrictions on what you can change your own name to.
I have never researched laws regarding name changes in various countries around the world. All I did was notice posts in this thread saying that in Germany, New Zealand, Switzerland, South Africa, and Québec, you are limited to using your mother’s last name, your father’s last name, your adopted parents’ last name, or some hyphenated combination thereof. Many of the posts in this thread mention governmentally-imposed limits on first names as well.
In response, I said I can’t understand why a country would limit an adult citizen’s ability to pick a name that he or she liked.
So, I’m gonna go out on a limb and say here that in Germany, it’s uncommon for children to have classmates named Lemonjello and Oranjello, unlike in the US. (Or so it’s often claimed.)
What those posts said was that these were the last names your parents were limited to when first naming you. They didn’t say anything about not being allowed to change your name yourself later.
You can change your name legally here in Québec, but there are no freebies with marriage, though I admit my statement that a name was “for life” was misleading. All the relevant information is available on the link I posted earlier as it’s all the same governmentoffice- you have to have a good reason to want to change your name, but that includes “You have been using for at least five years a name other than the one that appears on your birth certificate”, which is a pretty low standard to meet.
Basically, the laws prevent you from naming yourself of your kids “kl33nêx”; they allow you to use names of foreign origin, though they might ask you to confirm that the name isn’t entirely nonsensical and made up. Seriously, there are all kinds of interesting and unique names here; just not completely crazy ones.
Please read posts before responding to them. Specifically, in this case, note the material I quoted from post #10 (by grama) and post #21 (by mnemosyne), which very specifically address changing your name later.
I’m not making this stuff up – I’m merely quoting what other people said and stating that I don’t consider it reasonable for a government to do that. mnemosyne recanted his statement about an hour ago. Even if grama were to do the same, I still wouldn’t consider it reasonable for a government to limit your choices of last name to your parents’ names.
You mean Cherie Blair? :dubious: Don’t think we’ve had a PM’s wife called Cherry.
I know a few people in England who’ve changed their names- it’s not very hard- including one who changed her name to her boyfriend’s, instead of marriage (a friend’s Mum, and now the friend is planning to do the same thing, weirdly), and one who’s new name includes a number ‘3’ in the middle of it, which is always fun in airports.
Here, you can choose any name for a baby at birth (barring a few classed as offensive etc.)- it doesn’t have to have any connection with either parent’s name.
When my Mum was born - her parents were forced by the church to reverse her planned first and middle names, as her initials would have been ‘JEW’, and they refused to christen a baby that…
Because you switched the discussion from “what name can parents pick to give their child at birth?” to “Adults should be allowed to change their name to anything they like”.
In Spain you can, it’s how we got hyphenated lastnames in the 19th century. Laws regarding names have changed since then but they’re actually more flexible now. It’s unusual, specially now that people at the register do expect parents to be able to read, write and spell*, but if you tell the registrar that yes, you want to name your kid something that’s neither parent’s lastname you can.
my grandfather and his closest relatives had different lastnames because c.1910 the registrars didn’t bother ask “how do you spell that?”
I did not “switch the discussion.” I commented on what others had already said.
As I told Hypnagogic Jerk, read my stuff before arguing with it. I was specifically and directly addressing things that grama and mnemosyne said about adults changing their name. I explained this all to Hypnagogic Jerk in post #49. Give it a look.
If you disagree with me, fine, but don’t tell me I don’t have a right to hold that opinion.
I don’t understand what you’re getting at, Fish Cheer. How was my comment “switching the discussion” any more than anyone else’s? The discussion of changing your name came up in post #2, for goodness’ sake. I was just commenting on it, after several other people mentioned name changes.