maiden name

maiden name
noun
a woman's surname before marriage
Hypernyms: ↑surname, ↑family name, ↑cognomen, ↑last name

* * *

noun, pl ⋯ names [count]
: a woman's family name before she is married

After she divorced, she took back her maiden name.

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ˈmaiden name [maiden name maiden names] noun
a woman's family name before marriage

Kate kept her maiden name when she got married

(= did not change her surname to that of her husband)

.

 
Culture:
surnames
In Britain and the US surnames, also called last names or family names, pass from fathers or, in some cases, mothers to their children. Traditionally, women change their surname when they marry, replacing their maiden name, the surname they had from birth, with the surname of their husband. In the US especially, some women keep their maiden name as a middle name. Others choose to keep their maiden name as their surname after they are married. A few create a double-barrelled name (AmE hyphenated name) from the two surnames, such as Johnson-Brown. In a few cases the husband and children may also take this name. In Britain a double-barrelled surname used to suggest an upper-class background, but this is no longer always so.
In the US, laws about changing a last name, whether after marriage or for some other reason, vary from state to state, but it is usually a simple process and in some states people can just begin to use a new name if they want to. In Britain a woman can change her surname automatically after marriage. If people wish to change their name for any other reason they can do so by deed poll, a simple legal procedure.
In fact people rarely change their surname except after marriage, and many people are able to research their family history over many centuries. Most families were known by surnames by 1300 and many of the old names are still common. Sometimes the names reflected the place where the family lived, such as the name of their village or a reference to a feature of the local countryside, e.g. Ford, Hill or Wood. Other surnames refer to the original occupation or trade of the family, e.g. Baker, Miller, Shepherd and Smith. Sometimes the surname began as a ↑nickname. For instance, someone with dark hair or dark skin might be called Black, Blake or Brown. Some surnames were taken from personal names, as in Andrews, Martin and Roberts. Others were based on French names that came to Britain during the ↑Norman Conquest, e.g. Sinclair from the French ‘Saint-Clair’.
Many surnames occur throughout Britain, but others suggest a particular regional origin. Many Scottish names begin with Mc- or Mac-, meaning ‚son of’, e.g. McDonald and MacGregor. Members of a ↑clan added this prefix to their father’s name. Irish surnames often begin with O’, meaning ‚descended from’, e.g. O’Brien. Many Irish surnames are derived from ancient ↑Celtic names. Common Welsh surnames include Evans, Morgan, Price, Rees and Williams. The most common surname in England and Scotland is Smith, closely followed by Jones, a name also widely found in Wales. Other surnames were brought to Britain by families from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and China. These include Ahmed, Hussain, Khan, Patel, Singh and Tsang.
All the surnames found in Britain are also found in the US, together with many others from all over the world. Some people wanted to sound more American when they arrived in the US and so took English last names. Sometimes government officials could not understand the names of new arrivals and wrote similar English names on their documents. Many Americans of German origin changed their names during the two world wars. ↑African Americans whose ancestors were slaves do not know what last names their families originally had. Many have English or Irish names, because slaves had to take the names of their owners.
When British and American people introduce themselves they give their first name and then their surname, e.g. Michael Johnson, Linda Johnson. The opposite order ‚Johnson, Michael’ is used only in alphabetical lists. In informal situations people often give only their first name. When people are addressed formally a title is put before their last name, usually Mr for men and Mrs, Miss or Ms for women. Married women used always to be called Mrs Johnson, etc. Unmarried women were known as Miss Johnson, etc. Many women now prefer the title Ms because, like Mr, it does not give any information about whether the person is married. Other titles include Dr for medical doctors and people with a doctorateand General, Colonel, etc. for people holding military ranks. People can be addressed as Dr Jones, Professor Roberts etc. or simply as Doctor (for a medical doctor) and Professor. Men especially may be referred to simply by their last name, e.g. the previous president was Clinton, but addressing somebody in this way can seem old-fashioned or may cause offence.
 
Example Bank:

Kate kept her maiden name when she got married.

She decided to keep her maiden name for professional purposes.


Useful english dictionary. 2012.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Maiden name — Maiden Maid en, a. 1. Of or pertaining to a maiden, or to maidens; suitable to, or characteristic of, a virgin; as, maiden innocence. Amid the maiden throng. Addison. [1913 Webster] Have you no modesty, no maiden shame ? Shak. [1913 Webster] 2.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • maiden name — maiden names N COUNT: usu poss N A married woman s maiden name is her parents surname, which she used before she got married and started using her husband s surname. Syn: married name …   English dictionary

  • maiden name — n a woman s family name before she got married and started using her husband s family name →married name …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • maiden name — maiden ,name noun count a woman s original family name when she is married and uses her husband s family name instead …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • maiden name — ► NOUN ▪ the surname of a married woman before her marriage …   English terms dictionary

  • maiden name — n. the surname that a married woman had before marrying: now used chiefly with regard to a woman who has adopted her husband s surname …   English World dictionary

  • maiden name — UK / US noun [countable] Word forms maiden name : singular maiden name plural maiden names a woman s original family name when she is married and uses her husband s family name instead …   English dictionary

  • maiden name — noun A married womans original last name; her name when she was a maiden …   Wiktionary

  • maiden name — (Roget s IV) n. Syn. family name, inherited name, surname, cognomen; see name 1 …   English dictionary for students

  • ˈmaiden ˌname — noun [C] the original family name of a woman who uses her husband s family name now …   Dictionary for writing and speaking English

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