In the spirit of Rich Dad, Poor Dad, it should be called.....
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Dad Name, Name Dad
`i'll get my coat
In the spirit of Rich Dad, Poor Dad, it should be called.....
I actually think our very own MoneyMatters should have it as a chapter in his putative “pseudo-whimsical yet with an undercurrent of impotent rage” satirical take on life in Japan.
JapaneseMike wrote: ↑Sat Jul 31, 2021 7:12 amIn the spirit of Rich Dad, Poor Dad, it should be called.....
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Dad Name, Name Dad
`i'll get my coat
I too reckon the status quo is probably less burdensome than the name change from the UK end, though below is my take on which UK name change solution would be the easiest...nickr wrote: ↑Thu Jul 29, 2021 3:51 am @kuma, Thanks so much for such a detailed reply. There's an awful lot involved, eh? My initial reaction to seeing the possible steps laid out like that is to give up the idea.
I think it's probably best for me to accept that registration trouble is inevitable, but not an impenetrable wall - it just takes some patience, time and extra work. And it's not forever. It'll resolve itself in 30 to 40 years, and I've ensured the problem isn't passed down to my son, who has his mum's surname and no middle name.
And then there's always the option of naturalization of course. I wonder, would it better to take Japanese citizenship *after* both parents are gone and any inheritance received, or before?
I've just recently read on reddit that this has to be done during naturalization.kuma wrote: ↑Fri Jul 30, 2021 3:04 am Straying from the original question but staying on the name change theme, what happens in the below case:
Foreigner marries a Japanese national; husband and wife keep their original surnames
More than 6 months passes since marriage registration
Foreigner naturalises as Japanese
Does Article 750 of the Civil Code then kick in, forcing the married couple to have the same surname? And is that a major faff if not done within six months of the marriage registration, as the name change has to be done through the courts?
Not going to be relevant for me as my wife took my surname on marriage. Just curious about these things.
In a typical case when foreigner is a hsuband, and Japanese is a wife, the wife would usually already have husband's surname in katakana, so husband would only have to "katakanize" his name.kuma wrote: ↑Mon Aug 16, 2021 12:49 am Since a name change upon naturalisation is mandatory, the path of least resistance would be for that person to take their partner's surname. In my understanding, the other option would be for the partner to simultaneously change his/her name through the courts.
Not necessarily. Marriage to a foreign national is the only way a Japanese spouse can keep their maiden name, and many do.
I agree, it makes much more sense for a Japanese partner to keep their own last name.RetireJapan wrote: ↑Mon Aug 16, 2021 1:42 amNot necessarily. Marriage to a foreign national is the only way a Japanese spouse can keep their maiden name, and many do.
My wife has her original surname, which I choose to use as my alias.
If/when I naturalise I will probably take that name, but I could come up with a completely new one, at which point my wife would be saddled with it.
I amuse myself sometimes by suggesting outlandish names that she would hate to have