The maiden name come 1st. For example. Mellissa Anne Jones marries Peter Smith. She changes her name to Mellissa Anne Jones-Smith. In my case i have my mothers maiden name thru my parents divorce
Maxwell Klinger married Laverne Esposito.
When he first got married, his wife-to-be was already pregnant, so they got married quickly.
He is married now to his first wife whom he married about seven years ago
She is married and expecting her first child in Oct. '09
girls
A hyphenated married name where the wife wants to keep her own surname her surname comes first and then her husbands. Example: Jane Doe-Smith. Many professionals that have made a name for themselves before they get married prefer to keep their name for notoriety reasons and some young women just want to keep their family surname. It actually makes better sense when a woman combines her maiden name with that of her partners for genealogy purposes. Once a woman is married it is often hard to trace whom she married. If a man chooses to use a hypnenated name, his surname comes first: John Smith-Doe. Done this way, the names remain searchable in a genealogy database if properly entered.
There is no such thing as a "maiden first name." A woman's maiden name is the surname she used before she married and took her husband's surname.
Your mother's maiden name is her last name (surname) before she married.
When writing a person's name with their maiden name and married name, you typically write their maiden name first followed by their married name, with the word "nee" in between to indicate the maiden name. For example, "Jane Doe nee Smith."
Maxwell Klinger married Laverne Esposito.
Her maiden name was Hunt. Her first married name was Langton. Her second and fourth married names is Barlow. Her third married name was Rachid.
Your mother's maiden name is the family name your mother had (i.e. the name from her father) before she married your father and took his family name (i.e. your family name).
No, the word "thirty first floor" is not hyphenated.
Eleanor Roosevelt
In 1888 he married Elizabeth Taylor (Obviously not THE Elizabeth Taylor).
Their surname before they were married (and therefore took husbands surname, assuming they were married and chose to do so). Your mother's maiden name is her surname before she got married for the first time and took her husband's surname.
Jim Thorpe's second wife was Patricia Askew, who hailed from the state of Pennsylvania. Her maiden name was Askew, and she married Thorpe in 1945 after his first marriage ended.