Birth name
Adapted from Wikipedia · Discoverer experience
A birth name is the name a person is given when they are born. This can include the surname, the given name, or the complete name. In places where births are officially recorded, the full birth name is written down on a birth certificate. This name often becomes the person's legal name because it is the official record of who they are from the very beginning. Birth names are important because they help identify and connect families across generations.
Maiden and married names
Main article: Maiden and married names
Sometimes a person's name changes after they get married. We use special words to remember their original name. For women, we use "née," and for men, we use "né." These words mean "born" and help us know what someone's name was before marriage. For example, if Ann Jones marries and changes her name to Ann Smith, we might write "Ann Smith, née Jones" to show her original surname. The same goes for men: "Adam Smith, né Jones" would mean Adam's birth surname was Jones and he now uses Smith. These words come from French and are usually placed after the current surname.
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Birth name, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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