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What Happens if You Never Name Your Baby

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Is it illegal for a person not to have a name?

A Morton, Bangkok, Thailand

  • Prince seems to take got abroad with it for several years.

    Steven O'Sullivan, London United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland

  • It is illegal. A infant cannot leave the hospital without a name. The legal system tin can modify someone'south proper name in certain circumstances but volition non remove it. Prince did accept a name; it was an unpronounceable symbol. He has restored his original name now, since he did this to avert a contractual organisation with his music company. Presumably such contracts will at present be written with an boosted clause to prevent the exploitation of such a loophole.

    Daniel Morgan, Boston,Usa

  • Maybe.

    ,

  • In California, and the United states in general, unlike most countries, one tin be given, or legally change one'southward name to almost anything, provided it is not deceptive or for the purpose of fraud. I once met a man named "Anus". Regardless, one must take a name. California courts have decided that a number is non sufficient. For example "151" would non be permitted, just "One Hundred-Fifty-One" would be.

    Dave Dreaming Deport, Claremont, California U.s.a.

  • Yeah, but to whom do you issue the summons?

    William Barrett, London, NW10 UK

  • In the UK, a baby must be registered by proper noun at the local Registry Office within six weeks of birth: while information technology is legal to alter your proper name from the one you were registered by, your proof of registration (your nativity certification) will exist required for at least two legal events that many people observe essential: getting a passport, getting married, Interestingly, while many people, including some registry office clerks, believe a infant born in wedlock must legally deport its father's surname, this is not true. You may give the helpless infant any name you cull: Hey Y'all, for example, if you think you can get away with information technology once the infant is old enough to boot you in the shins.

    Jane Carnall, Edinburgh UK

  • I don't know if information technology's illegal, simply my aunt was never given a proper name. On her birth certificate the space for her name was left empty. Nosotros always knew her as 'Mick'.

    Shirley Dockerill, Bahrain

  • Evidently not. In the course of family history research I take searched birth indexes at the Family unit Records Middle in London. At the end of the list for each surname are entries for those babies not given a name - as the female parent'south name must exist recorded these children will have a surname but no first name. There appears to be no necessity for the name to be registered at a afterwards date.

    Clive Gordon, Ruislip

  • In Norway it is. If you lot have not given your child a name with 90 days, the Rex (in effect the ministry building of justice) will do so for you. Names may as well be rejected, whereupon you volition have to come up with a new proper noun or have one imposed. 'Jesus' or 'Harry' are examples of rejected names. (Royalists hold on, 'Harry' is unacceptable on the grounds that information technology is also low class sounding).

    Mads Oyen, Dar es Salaam Tanzania

  • Some answers leave unanswered what might happen if the nameless person was built-in outside the United kingdom and entered it over the land border in Republic of ireland, without producing a passport. Do you accept to give your name if arrested? In practice every civilization gives someone a name, and then the authorities could debate that the person must have been known by some name at some time.

    Campbell McGregor, Glasgow Scotland

  • I of the Un human rights statutes, I'm not sure which ane, suggests that everyone has the right to have a proper name. Therefore if one was to decide not to name their child, they would be breaching that child'southward human rights. However I take heard of a club whose members have no names but are simply refered to in relation to their household.

    Robert Singh, London, U.k.

  • Residents of Cardiff will remember a homo who used to busk wearing a skirt in the town centre. He said he had 'abased the utilise of a proper noun for I wish to be associated with a void'. However, they may also remember that he presently became known as voidy - Surely every bit social beings, names are indispensable?

    Ben Rolfe, Cardiff U.k.

  • We are of the opinion that information technology is illegal considering a person not having a name reminds you of a thing registrated with a number and not of an identity.

    Katrin & Eva-Maria, Staffelstein Frg

  • A baby does not have to be registered by name within six weeks. The nascence has to exist registered within six weeks but you lot have a yr to decide on a name, or to modify the name you chose first. I simply know this considering my daughter takes ages choosing names for her children and she has 5 now. I also know an Australian boy who had a dash instead of a name while his parents decided on one they liked. In the terminate they decided that Dash rather suited him.

    Harriet Jodelka, Brixton United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland

  • I hate to disagree with Daniel Morgan about the laws of either Massachusetts or the Us - his post is not clear - merely I call up I must. By what potency would a hospital detain a infant that has, plainly, committed no crime. And where does it say in the police force that a baby must be either born in or taken to a hospital in the first place?

    Quentin Langley, Woking UK

  • I'm not sure if its legal or not, but I discover it interesting that information technology seems not too many Lawyers (of the non Barrack-Room multifariousness) read the Grauniad. In answer to Robert Singh though, surely the correct to have a proper name too imlpies the correct non to have one? I have the correct to wear shoulder length hair, only that doesn't mean I have to grow information technology.

    John Duffy, New York USA

  • "Your Proper name Is What You are Known By" Equally illegitimate, I was registered as Peter Warren, only always known when growing up every bit Peter Ford. At 21 I needed to produce a Birth Certificate for my Visitor Pension Scheme. I asked how I could change my name "No Demand", I was told, "you lot have just to sign and swear a proclamation that you are the person to whom the Birth Certificate refers" This I did, and it has stood me for the last 53 years, including passport application and marriage. Incidentally, when I joined the Ground forces in 1943, no proof of age was required. Plainly, someone who has lived even a brusk time in the company of others volition accept been addressed by them in some manner, and that volition be their legal name.

    Peter Ford, Birmingham United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland

  • This settles it: Convention on the Rights of the Child Adopted and opened for signature, ratification and accession by Full general Assembly resolution 44/25 of twenty November 1989 entry into force two September 1990, in accordance with article 49 Article seven one. The child shall be registered immediately afterward birth and shall have the right from nascency to a proper name, the right to larn a nationality and. as far as possible, the right to know and be cared for by his or her parents. 2. States Parties shall ensure the implementation of these rights in accordance with their national law and their obligations under the relevant international instruments in this field, in particular where the child would otherwise be stateless. Article eight ane. States Parties undertake to respect the right of the child to preserve his or her identity, including nationality, name and family unit relations as recognized by police force without unlawful interference. ii. Where a child is illegally deprived of some or all of the elements of his or her identity, States Parties shall provide appropriate assistance and protection, with a view to re-establishing rapidly his or her identity.

    Mads Oyen, Kampala Uganda

  • Skier Picabo Street's parent's did not give her a name when she was built-in, so her name was officially, "Baby Girl", until she chose Picabo at three-years-old. Patently, information technology is not uncommon for such a embrace-name to be applied to children in California.

    Conrad Risher, Washington, DC U.s.

  • Interestingly, hither in Quebec not merely is it illegal to not accept a name, but a committee exists to check the names that are given to children. This commission has the power to decline to allow you to name the child equally you chose if information technology deems that name inappropriate. For the committee, inappropriate consistutes a name in English language that is (in information technology'south opinion) non a existent proper noun. For case, if y'all're an one-time hippy and want to name your child "Sky" then you won't be immune. This police is in place to protect Quebec's first language (French) from silly Anglos confusing things and having cooler names than the French. (Well, I think that'southward the reason - I'one thousand not completely articulate on it, actually). Hence, River Pheonix would have had to be chosen Jean-Pierre Pheoneix.

    Greg, Montreal Canada

  • I know a bank director who had a customer who had changed his proper name to 'Dave'. Just Dave! Non 'Dave with a surname'. He was informed that he could not have a banking company account in the name of 'Dave' (for obvious reasons, apart from the technical one.) Dave was virtually upset by this failure to respect his called identity. Eventually, he agreed to be known (for banking purposes) equally Dave Dave. It may or may not be illegal not to have a name but apparently your human rights may exist denied if you don't.

    Debbie, Newcastle United kingdom

  • I used to piece of work for the DSS. One our customers, purely for the laugh it produced whenever he was summoned over the intercom for an interview, had inverse his proper noun by deed poll to Mr Loading-Bay-Monkey-Spanner-Wrench.

    Robert Bayley, London UK

  • I believe that Teller, the U.s. sorcerer (of Penn and Teller fame) has no first proper noun. His passport states "Teller, NFN" (No First Name). Fifty-fifty his parents, Mr. & Mrs. Teller, refer to him as "Teller".

    Hugo Mills, Southampton U.k.

  • If you have a correct to a name, then you must also have the correct to exist called " ". However y'all may terminate up being known as erstwhile 'man-with-no-name'. Without any moniker you'll find information technology incommunicable to collaborate on paper with even the least intrusive of our hierarchy.

    stephen coin, london united kingdom of great britain and northern ireland

  • I do know that my friend's parents were actually fined for not naming her within the 6 weeks! She's still getting over it...

    Zoe, United kingdom

  • Meet the motion picture The Man Without a Name by Aki Kaurismaki.

    none, London

  • The Mid-Western part of Nigeria is full of women known as "Sugariness", "Darling", "Queen" etc. because different another parts where babies are named on the eighth day, tradition has it that attaching a proper noun to the child volition allow evildoers to ... er, do it evil. I'm more interested all the same, in this right to grow shoulder length hair. Which treaty is that then?

    Follicly challenged, Lagos Nigeria

  • I believe that the Chinese used to have the custom of naming female new arrivals as simply 'Number two girl etc.' On recent visits to this country I noted that a large number of young ladies in their 20s would 'westernise' thier moniker to sound more 'sophisticated', the legality of which I am non enlightened!

    John Hayzen-Smith, Rugby, United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland

  • Well I am proof that some don't have names. I am 1 of them. You see my name is not on my birth certificate and never has been,I'm having problems now. They say i accept to pay 600.00 dollars for my name to go along my birth certificate right at present i'm looking for aid, i don't have that kind of coin, i accept kids and all?!!!!

    Donna , Brooklyn, NY, USA

  • There is a vivid song I recommend, chosen Cim To Je?, (Why is it?) by a modern day Slovakian group which shall remain nameless, called No Proper noun.

    Luke Sturges, Prague, Czech Commonwealth

  • Daniel Morgan is wrong - a baby can leave infirmary without a name. I know this because I am Jewish, and some observant Jews do not proper noun their babies until several days after the birth in synagogue, long after they've left infirmary. And so conspicuously, babies tin can leave hospital without names - at least in this country...

    Rebecca, London Great britain

  • There's a man in my village called Monsieur Dix-Neuf.

    Tony Drapkin, Vaux-Rouillac French republic

  • Re. Quentin'south question about why a baby must be in hospital in the starting time identify, I don't know annihilation nearly USA naming requirements, but there are states in the USA where giving birth at domicile is of dubious legality, and midwives have been prosecuted for attending domicile births. Babies built-in in taxis usually end upwards in hospital for obvious reasons!

    Catherine, Oxford, Great britain

  • Many years ago the brothers of a Breton friend of mine were given "unacceptable names" by their parents - these were historic Breton ones. Their births were therefore refused registration and when the time came they did not accept to serve in the French Army because there was no proof of their existence.

    Erika Wilson, Newark DE, USA

  • Zoe'south acquaintances were not 'fined' for not naming their child as there is no requirement for giving a forename at registration (though as other correspondents have indicated, it very difficult to get passports, etc, without one) only it is certainly an offence not to register the nativity of child within forty-two days of the birth.

    Dorothy Clarkson, Hebden Bridge UK

  • In Republic of india, girls can be named as Anamika (Sankrit - meaning No Proper noun). As well, certain sects in Tamil Nadu, a southern state of India, have the custom of having multiple names for a person.

    Chandrashekhar, Chennai India

  • To the person who said that Teller was not born wih a first name, that is not true. He was born Raymond Joseph Teller, merely legally changed information technology to just Teller.

    Eliza, Chicago, Il USA

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Source: https://www.theguardian.com/notesandqueries/query/0,,-7635,00.html