Anglosphere In countries that primarily speak English—such as
Australia,
Canada,
Ireland,
New Zealand, the
United Kingdom, and the
United States—the forename of a relative is sometimes used as one's middle name to honor familial heritage. In many cases in the United States, however, a person's middle name does not derive from relatives, but is used instead to honor close family friends or notable public figures. In the United States, the middle name is often
abbreviated to the middle initial. This first became popular in the 19th century. Examples of famous people who abbreviated their middle names include
John D. Rockefeller,
Dwight D. Eisenhower, and
Booker T. Washington. In the 21st century, widespread use of middle initials in the United States is in decline, although they are still commonly used in intellectual fields, where studies show that middle initials are associated with knowledgeability and authoritativeness. The abbreviations "N.M.N." (no middle name) and "N.M.I." (no middle initial) are sometimes used in formal documents in the United States, where a middle initial or name is expected but the person does not have one. Sometimes middle initials have been used to make a person's name more distinct. Screenwriter
David X. Cohen was born David Samuel Cohen, but adopted the middle initial "X" when he joined the
Writers Guild of America, as there was already a member named David S. Cohen, and the union forbade multiple writers from using the same name. A rare case of an individual being given only an initial as a middle name, with the initial not explicitly standing for anything, was
Harry S. Truman. Other people with single-letter middle names include
Robert B. Hollander Jr. and
Mark M Davis.
Jennifer 8. Lee, an American author, was not given a middle name at birth so she chose "8" when she was a teenager, in recognition of her Chinese ancestry because the number eight symbolizes prosperity and good luck. More than two given middle names is fairly common. In Britain, the use of two middle names is traditionally more common among the upper and middle classes.
China, Japan, and Korea Most people are not given middle names in China. Later in life, some Chinese people anglicise or change their names, sometimes including middle names.
India Traditional names in
India vary regionally due to its ethnic and religious diversity. Modern
Hindu names across India use a first name, which is usually a word in Sanskrit or an indigenous Indian language, a middle name (in rare instances), which is usually the name of a child's father or spouse, followed by a surname which is usually the
caste that the person's family belongs to, taken from the father or husband. Middle and last names from the traditionally
matrilineal Nair community in Kerala were historically based on the mother's family. Among the
Sikhs of India, many have adopted the middle name
Singh or
Kaur which means lion and princess respectively. This is sometimes followed by their
Punjabi caste surname. Among
Indian Muslims, similar naming conventions to Hindus and Sikhs are followed, but the names are usually in
Arabic,
Persian or
Urdu.
Philippines Middle names mostly use the mother's maiden surname, inserted between the given name and the surname (father's surname) and are almost always abbreviated, signifying that it is a "middle name".
Russia Both girls and boys are typically given a middle name based on their father's forename. For girls, often
ovna or
evna is added to the end, whereas for boys
ovich or
evich is sometimes added to the end.
Scandinavia The naming conventions of Scandinavian countries do not call given names middle names. While extra first names often are referred to as middle names in everyday language, laws do not reflect that and consider all of them first names. A person can have multiple first names, but usually, only one of them is used to address the person. A passport contains all names, but all except the surname are listed as first/given names. Names combined with a hyphen are counted as one name. A person named "Ulrika Britt-Inger Marie Fredriksson" has three first names and one last name, and this individual could choose to go by any of those three first names. In
Denmark and
Norway, the legal term middle name refers most often to names that were originally surnames, but not part of the last name of the name bearer. A middle name could be a person's mother's maiden name or the last name of another recent ancestor (for instance a grandparent). In
Sweden, however, although middle names were introduced in the Name Act of 1963, they were later called
tilläggsnamn (added name), and then
mellannamn (middle name) in the Name Act of 1983. The name act of 2017 removed the concept entirely. Existing last-name middle names may still be used, but can no longer be given.
Vietnam The component that appears in the middle of a Vietnamese personal name is not properly called a
tên giữa (middle name), but rather a
tên đệm (), and it is optional. The
tên đệm differs from the Western middle name in both function and usage: it cannot be used independently and must be used together with the first given name when addressing a person. For this reason the
tên đệm is generally regarded as an optional component of a given name, rather than a separate middle name.
Thị is a traditional middle name which means that the person is female. The masculine equivalent is
Văn. ==See also==