A personal naming system, or anthroponymic system, is a system describing the choice of personal name in a certain society. Personal names consist of one or more parts, such as
given name,
surname and
patronymic. Personal naming systems are studied within the field of
anthroponymy. In contemporary Western societies (except for Iceland, Hungary, and sometimes
Flanders, depending on the occasion), the most common naming convention is that a person must have a
given name, which is usually gender-specific, followed by the parents'
family name. In
onomastic terminology, given names of male persons are called
andronyms (from
Ancient Greek ἀνήρ / man, and ὄνομα / name), while given names of female persons are called
gynonyms (from
Ancient Greek γυνή / woman, and ὄνομα / name). Some given names are bespoke, but most are repeated from earlier generations in the same culture. Many are drawn from mythology, some of which span multiple language areas. This has resulted in related names in different languages (e.g.
George,
Georg,
Jorge), which might be translated or might be maintained as immutable proper nouns. In earlier times, Scandinavian countries followed patronymic naming, with people effectively called "X's son/daughter"; this is now the case only in Iceland and was recently re-introduced as an option in the
Faroe Islands. It is legally possible in Finland as people of Icelandic ethnic naming are specifically named in the name law. When people of this name convert to standards of other cultures, the phrase is often condensed into one word, creating last names like Jacobsen (Jacob's Son). There is a range of personal naming systems: • Binomial systems: apart from their given name, people are described by their surnames, which they obtain from one of their parents. Most modern European personal naming systems are of this type. • Patronymic systems: apart from their given name, people are described by their
patronymics, that is, given names (not surnames) of parents or other ancestors. Such systems were in wide use throughout Europe in the first millennium CE, but were replaced by binomial systems. The
Icelandic system is still patronymic. • More complex systems like
Arabic system, consisting of
paedonymic (son's name), given name, patronymic and one or two
bynames. Different cultures have different conventions for personal names.
English-speaking countries Generational designation When names are repeated across generations, the senior or junior generation (or both) may be designed with the
name suffix "Sr." or "Jr.", respectively (in the former case, retrospectively); or, more formally, by an
ordinal Roman number such as "I", "II" or "III". In the Catholic tradition, papal names are distinguished in sequence, and may be reused many times, such as
Leo XIV (the 14th pope assuming the papal name "Leo"). In the case of the American presidents
George H. W. Bush and his son
George W. Bush, distinct middle initials serve this purpose instead, necessitating their more frequent use. The improvised and unofficial "Bush Sr." and "Bush Jr." were nevertheless tossed about in banter on many
entertainment journalism opinion panels; alternatively, they became distinguished merely as "W." and "H. W.".
Rank, title, honour, accreditation, and affiliation In formal address, personal names may be preceded by
pre-nominal letters, giving title (e.g. Dr.,
Captain), or social rank, which is commonly gendered (e.g. Mr., Mrs., Ms., Miss.) and might additionally convey
marital status. Historically, professional titles such as "Doctor" and "Reverend" were largely confined to male professions, so these were implicitly gendered. In formal address, personal names, inclusive of a generational designation, if any, may be followed by one or more
post-nominal letters giving office, honour, decoration, accreditation, or formal affiliation. == Name order ==
Western name order (family name at the last) ", written in Western name order, whereas her name in Japanese, which uses Eastern order, would be
Momoi Haruko. The order
given name(s), family name is commonly known as the
Western name order and is usually used in European countries and in non-European countries that have cultures predominantly influenced by Western Europe (e.g. the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand). It is also used in non-Western regions such as
Northern,
Eastern,
Central and
Western India; Pakistan; Bangladesh; Nepal, Sri Lanka, Thailand; Saudi Arabia; Singapore; Malaysia (most of, non-traditional); and the Philippines. Within alphabetic lists and catalogs, however, the family name is generally put first, with the given name(s) following and separated by a
comma (e.g.
Jobs, Steve or
Van Gerwen, Michael) representing the "lexical name order". This convention is followed by most Western libraries, as well as on many administrative forms. In some countries, such as France, or countries previously part of the former Soviet Union, the comma may be dropped and the swapped form of the name be uttered as such, perceived as a mark of bureaucratic formality. In the USSR and now Russia, personal initials are often written in the "family namegiven namepatronymic name" order when signing official documents, e.g. "
Rachmaninoff S.V.".
Eastern name order (family name at the first) 's name is spelled as "
Lincoln Ábrahám" in this magazine from Hungary, the only country in Europe that officially uses the Eastern order – even foreign names used to be Hungarianized up until the 20th century. The order
family name, given name, commonly known as the
Eastern name order, began to be prominently used in
Ancient China and subsequently influenced the
East Asian cultural sphere (China, Taiwan, Japan, Korea, and Vietnam) and particularly among the Chinese communities in Cambodia, Laos, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, or the Philippines. It is also used in the
southern and
northeastern parts of India, and by the
Khmer and
Hmong of
Southeast Asia, as well as by
Hungary, and the
Mordvins of the
former Soviet Union. In Rwanda and Uganda, the ordering "traditional family name (surname) first, Western origin given name second" is also frequently used. Eastern name order may occasionally be used in rural areas of Germany in informal, spoken contexts. When East Asian names are
transliterated into the
Latin alphabet, some people prefer to convert them to the Western order, while others leave them in the Eastern order but write the family name in
capital letters. To avoid confusion, there is a convention in some language communities, e.g., French, that the family name should be written in all capitals when engaging in formal correspondence or writing for an international audience. In Hungarian, the Eastern order of Japanese names is officially kept, and Hungarian transliteration is used (e.g.
Mijazaki Hajao in Hungarian), but Western name order is also sometimes used with English transliteration (e.g.
Hayao Miyazaki). This is also true for Hungarian names in Japanese, e.g.
Ferenc Puskás (, written in the same Eastern order "Puskás Ferenc"). Starting from the
Meiji Restoration in 1868, the Western name order was primarily used among the Japanese nobility when identifying themselves to non-Asians with their
romanized names. As a result, in popular Western publications, this order became increasingly used for Japanese names in the subsequent decades. In 2020, the
Government of Japan reverted the Westernized name order back to the Eastern name order in official documents (e.g.
identity documents,
academic certificates,
birth certificates,
marriage certificates, among others), which means writing family name first in capital letters and has recommended that the same format be used among the general Japanese public. Japan has also requested Western publications to respect this change, such as not using
Shinzo Abe but rather Abe Shinzo, similar to how Chinese leader
Xi Jinping is not referred to as Jinping Xi. Its sluggish response by Western publications was met with ire by Japanese politician
Taro Kono, who stated that "If you can write
Moon Jae-in and
Xi Jinping in correct order, you can surely write Abe Shinzo the same way."
East Asia Chinese, Koreans, and other East Asian peoples, except for those traveling or living outside of China and areas influenced by China, rarely reverse their Chinese and Korean language names to the Western naming order. Western publications also preserve this Eastern naming order for Chinese, Korean and other East Asian individuals, with the family name first, followed by the given name.
Ethnic Chinese in former British colonies Cantonese names of
Hong Kong people are usually written in the Eastern order with or without a comma (e.g. Bai Chiu En or Bai, Chiu En). Outside Hong Kong, they are usually written in Western order. Unlike other East Asian countries, the syllables or
logograms of given names are not hyphenated or compounded but instead separated by a space (e.g. Chiu En). Outside East Asia, the second syllables are often confused with middle names regardless of name order. Some computer systems could not handle given name inputs with space characters. Some Chinese, Malaysians, and Singaporeans may have an anglicised given name, which is always written in the Western order. The English and transliterated Chinese full names can be written in various orders. A hybrid order is preferred in official documents including the
legislative records in the case for Hong Kong. Examples of the hybrid order goes in the form of Hong Kong actor "
Tony Leung Chiu-wai" or Singapore Prime Minister "
Lawrence Wong Shyun Tsai", with family names (in the example, Leung and Wong) shared in the middle. Therefore, the anglicised names are written in the Western order (Tony Leung, Lawrence Wong) and the Chinese names are written in the Eastern order (Leung Chiu-wai, 梁朝偉; Wong Shyun Tsai, 黄循财).
Japanese Japanese use the Eastern naming order (family name followed by given name). In contrast to China and Korea, due to familiarity, Japanese names of contemporary people are usually "switched" when people who have such names are mentioned in media in Western countries; for example, ''Koizumi Jun'ichirō'' is known as
Junichiro Koizumi in English. Japan has requested that Western publications cease this practice of placing their names in the Western name order and revert to the Eastern name order. The family name first format is different from
North India where family name typically appears last or other parts of South India where
patronymic names are widely used instead of family names.
Tamil Tamil people, generally those of younger generations, do not employ
caste names as surnames. This came into common use in India and also the
Tamil diaspora in nations like Singapore after the
Dravidian movement in 1930s, when the
Self respect movement in the 1950s and 1960s campaigned against the use of one's caste as part of the name. Patronymic naming system is: apart from their given name, people are described by their patronymic, that is given names (not surnames) of their father. Older generations used the initials system where the father's given name appears as an initial, for e.g.:
Tamil Hindu people's names simply use initials as a prefix instead of
Patronymic suffix (father's given name) and the initials is/ are prefixed or listed first and then followed by the son's/ daughter's given name. One system used for naming, using only given names (without using family name or surname) is as below: for Tamil Hindu son's name using the initials system: S. Rajeev: (initial S for father's given name Suresh and Rajeev is the son's given name). The same Tamil Hindu name using
Patronymic suffix last name system is Rajeev Suresh meaning Rajeev son of Suresh (Rajeev (first is son's given name) followed by Suresh (father's given name)). As a result, unlike surnames, while using patronymic suffix the same last name will not pass down through many generations. For Tamil Hindu daughters, the initials naming the wife may or may not take her husband's given name as her last name instead of her father's. E.g.: after marriage, Meena Jagadish: meaning Meena wife of Jagadish: Meena (first is wife's given name) followed by Jagadish (husband's given name).
Hungary Hungary is the only European country that uses the Eastern naming order, where the given name is placed after the family name. This usage is thought to originate from the structure of
noun phrases in
Hungarian –
adjectives always precede the noun. The convention became standard in the 14th to 15th centuries, when hereditary surnames became widespread.
Mordvin Mordvins use two names – a Mordvin name and a Russian name. The Mordvin name is written in the Eastern name order. Usually, the Mordvin surname is the same as the Russian surname, for example Sharononj Sandra (Russian:
Aleksandr Sharonov), but it can be different at times, for example
Yovlan Olo (Russian: Vladimir Romashkin). ==Non-human personal names==