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"surnames" Antonyms

185 Sentences With "surnames"

How to use surnames in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "surnames" and check conjugation/comparative form for "surnames". Mastering all the usages of "surnames" from sentence examples published by news publications.

For privacy reasons, they then replaced those surnames with the letters A, B, C, D, and E. They show here that the four highest-earning surnames of 2011 were all above-average surnames back in 1427.
Husbands take their wives' surnames, some couples combine their surnames and, of course, women are increasingly shunning the practice altogether and keeping their own names.
Other popular surnames include Johnson, Miller, Jones, Williams, and Anderson.
Some nominees used only first names, others added surnames, too.
His daughter and his wife, Glorya, also changed their surnames.
Both John and I have surnames that begin with "C."333.
With that, Markoo — an elision of both designers' surnames — was born.
With no surnames, the Taushiro were each given two: García García.
"With Muslims, there is a problem of title (surnames)," said Wadud.
Going off surnames, it's safe to assume Galen and Jyn are related.
People in this universe assume surnames for whatever company they work for.
He collaborated with a genealogist to produce a list of possible surnames.
Look at the surnames of Londoners compared to those in the shires.
Studies have shown that to get a job interview, people with African- or Asian-sounding surnames have to send in twice as many CVs as those with white British-sounding surnames — even where they have the same qualifications.
More often than not, people just go by both surnames with no issue.
Both Efrain and Oswaldo spoke on condition that their surnames not be published.
German media often do not report the surnames of people involved in crimes.
"Some are unique or unique variations of more frequent names," said Joshua Comenetz, the manager of the bureau's surnames project, whose own name was not among the 162,000 surnames that were listed by 100 or more Americans on their census forms.
Border patrol agents with Hispanic surnames don't see themselves as Mexican or Mexican American.
But their results would be limited to potential surnames like Smith, Johnson, and Jones.
Although everyone save for Pauly D — Let's skip the surnames and honorifics, shall we?
For some with common surnames, it would take several years to find their families.
Some names and surnames have been withheld at members' request to protect their identity.
Those same surnames appear often in historic documents that reveal transactions for human life.
It is the clumping together of certain surnames (Leons and Weis) — were they siblings?
But when he started suggesting surnames, I told him I'd never give mine up.
These days the four most common surnames in Prato are Chen, Hu, Lin and Wang.
The persistence of privileged surnames in prized jobs reveals the slow pace of social mobility.
Mr Corbyn cited Nina, one of the civilians (invariably lacking surnames) who pepper these encounters.
Both husband and wife asked that Reuters use only their surnames to protect their privacy.
One of the captions also misspelled the surnames of two people involved with the hub.
An earlier version of this obituary misstated the surnames of two of Mr. Anderson's daughters.
The soldiers spoke on the condition that their surnames not be used for security reasons.
"It's very hard to see what the state is accomplishing by requiring that with surnames."
That's even reflected in the name of our brand, which melds both of our surnames.
In Australia, where many of the refugees went, Nguyen is among the most common surnames.
"We have different surnames and we couldn't look more different," Reed said, according to The Sun.
He probably greets children with a three-pump business handshake and addresses dogs by their surnames.
Sudanese naming conventions also posed a problem, because there are no surnames carried down across generations.
According to the Independent, the algorithm recognizes those with the same surnames and splits them up.
This post has been updated to reflect the couple's preferred and formal surnames, Pentón and Martínez.
Sang's associates, whose surnames were given as Wang and Chen, also received custodial sentences and fines.
Here is a closer look at the eight surnames of the women directors recognized by Portman:
" As the official Right Stuff lexicon explains, this is because "all Jewish surnames echo throughout history.
A defined group of noble families had surnames based on the names of their noble houses.
He and other drivers declined to give their surnames for fear of being identified by authorities.
What they are not necessarily doing is turning their surnames into verbs and acting on them.
They would share the regions where their families had lived and the top surnames in their trees.
For one early paper he pulled surnames from Italian phone directories as proxies for father-son transmission.
Meat, rosemary, garlic—like the surnames of the world's greatest detective trio, they get the job done.
They looked at 2011 income data to identity the five highest-earning surnames in present-day Florence.
The names are selected from the US Census Bureau's list of top Hispanic surnames, the official said.
It is not an era in academic history when professors address students by their surnames: Mister, Miss.
No big time fight in Bangkok between two native nak muay (kickboxers) with unpronounceable surnames ever is.
For one example, Koreans tend to have common surnames, and so would yield more matches, Chapman explained.
In 21625, for example, "Spanish surnames" were used to count what are now called Hispanics or Latinos.
Because of the sensitive nature, we gave readers the option of remaining anonymous or omitting their surnames.
The surnames of the three crew and 10 passengers published by the Coahuila government were all Hispanic.
A majority of the public reckon married people should be free to choose their surnames, according to polls.
The congresswoman explained that in Latinx culture, it's common for children to go by both their parents' surnames.
When ICE showed up at Motel 28500 and asked to look through guest lists, it circled Spanish surnames.
An earlier version of this article misspelled the surnames of two artists given special mentions by the jury.
An earlier version of this article reversed the surnames of the bride and groom in the last paragraph.
" A previous version of a picture caption with this article misstated the surnames of actors in "Mein Kampf.
Mr. Pink offers us a set of five people of note whose surnames can be reimagined as verbs.
Correction: This story has been updated to reflect the correct spellings of Brandon Caruthers' and Calvin Howse's surnames.
Some of its tech-savvy adherents recently got attention by developing ways to identify Jews by their surnames online.
Some people quoted in this article requested that their surnames were not included in order to protect their privacy.
Checking the surnames of the largest shareholders, the authors found that 19% of firms were named after their founders.
One analysis found that people with Hispanic surnames were purged at a rate 60 percent greater than everyone else.
Many of the Bisbee deportees had Spanish or Slavic surnames, and their removal has an element of ethnic cleansing.
SETH COLTER WALLS An earlier version of this article misspelled the surnames of two musicians playing at Riverside Park.
An earlier version of the picture caption with this article misstated the surnames of two members of the Turtles.
CORRECTION: A previous version of this story incorrectly referred to the surnames of the victim's mother and mother-in-law.
The paucity of surnames in China—almost 85% of people share just 100 family names—is not necessarily an obstacle.
One historian, examining surnames, estimated that, by 1888, three-quarters of all New York firefighters may have been Irish-American.
Which of his surnames to use is only the most obvious question raised by this tale of redemption and recapture.
"I never had a hint of anything like that," says Mr Shelton, struggling over which of Bill's surnames to use.
A grand jury declined to press criminal charges against the deputies who shot him, both of whom had Latino surnames.
The series, titled "Codex Rodriguez-Mondragón," after her father's and mother's surnames, serves as a curious record of our time.
There was a time when these two shared the stage often as crowds waved signs with both of their surnames.
In those days in Italy children of purportedly "unknown" fathers were assigned surnames starting with a different letter each year.
Does Will Shortz know that both actors' surnames have the same number of letters, and is he doing this deliberately?
The pair cemented the decision by reading vows at an adoption ceremony, getting matching tattoos, and even changing their surnames.
Kelsey Johnold, a 34-year-old business analyst in Seattle, and her husband Nate combined their surnames Dippold and Johnson.
The prosecutors recommended the arrests of two police officers, identified only by their surnames, Xing and Zhou, the Weibo post said.
But Zuleima — who asked that the couple's surnames not be used because some relatives opposed abortion — was already 31 weeks pregnant.
Others are bad play on words on surnames, poop, sodomy, overweight, a little bit of Nazis and a lot of nudity.
And registrants from groups where a few surnames are commonly used are especially vulnerable to being mistakenly struck from the rolls.
Though the Parabon team was not able to create a probable suspect list, the family tree hinted at several possible surnames.
Yet Ming, which is an amalgam of their two surnames, said she looks back on those years with "a variety of lenses".
Aside from some scattered Todd Gurley jerseys, few surnames off the present roster could be found on the backs of pregame partyers.
For such mailings, Taylor says Texas goes off the U.S. Census Bureau's list of most common surnames by race and Hispanic origin.
The couple, who Buttigieg referred to as Mary and Gabe without using their surnames, came to Buttigieg's office shortly before their appointment.
According to Pottermore: So far, only a few names have been revealed, but some surnames will be familiar to Harry Potter fans.
An earlier version of this obituary, using information from Mr. Magowan's wife, misstated the surnames of his daughters Kimberley, Margot and Hilary.
The paintings "Chichiriviche" and "Coro" (1966), titled after Venezuelan toponymic surnames, are large planes of color that cover most of the canvases' surfaces.
It is the sort of small town in which the same surnames, many of them Cajun, recur among prominent business-owners and officeholders.
The Dubovoys used the same brokerage accounts repeatedly, and they owned some of them directly or through immediate family members with shared surnames.
They then looked back at 1427 data to find information about the earnings and occupations with those same five surnames 700 years ago.
In January 2017, a notice welcoming new members to Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach included 30 surnames, but not one was Hispanic.
In a formal country, where people address one another by their surnames and respect for others guides behaviour, it is all too stressful.
But we read somewhere that if a couple has different surnames the Egyptian authorities could make it difficult to acquire joint-residence visas.
Critics also say the law trails the private sector, which has been accommodating more women who prefer to use their birth surnames professionally.
A younger generation of working women say their original surnames carry professional clout that they do not want to lose when they marry.
Ms. Hyde used Artifact Uprising to produce a hardcover coffee table book that she titled "Hussel in the Kitchen," combining the couple's surnames.
The theme set includes five movies that Mr. Barkin recasts with actors whose surnames supposedly would have made them better for that film.
There is no upside whatever to this cruelty, unless you just want to have fewer people with brown skin and Hispanic surnames around.
He has spoken in favor of letting married couples use separate surnames, media reported, a practice banned for official documents under current law.
Side Street The doorbells outside a yellow-brick apartment building reflected today's New York, with Albanian, Arabic and Spanish surnames taped above them.
He discourages children from including their surnames, and does not collect or sell personal information, he said, pointing to the site's privacy policy.
This election cycle has shown a hankering for anti-establishment candidates and a wariness toward political dynasties, whether their surnames are Clinton or Bush.
The first three to grace the list were identified only by their surnames -- Qiao, Deng, and Gao -- according to the China National Tourism Administration.
Like other students who spoke to Reuters at the demonstrations, Katya, Maxim and Matvei asked that their surnames not be published to avoid repercussions.
The couple, who are changing their surnames to Kamal-Grayson, met in 2011 as interns at the Harvard Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society.
Had there had been a lot of cuckoldry over the centuries, the link between genetics and surnames should have been weaker, or disappeared altogether.
As the Dorrance family multiplied over a number of different clans and surnames, control over the company stayed most tightly through Jack's immediate offspring.
The surnames of three important figures who worked to advance CIVIL RIGHTS (the revealer at 57A) are the last words in the theme phrases.
That initialism referred to the surnames of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.
One putative explanation, known as ADD after the initials of the surnames of three of its inventors, invokes extra dimensions to account for the difference.
A dance review on Monday about a performance by the Paris Opera Ballet at the Palais Garnier in Paris misspelled the surnames of two dancers.
German law protects the identity of the accused, meaning that unless there are extenuating circumstances, only first names and initials of surnames are made public.
In this world surnames—qualifiers added to the name proper—that denoted family were important almost exclusively when there was land or title to inherit.
It turns out that the British royal family has somewhat of a fraught relationship with last names — or surnames as they're known across the pond.
In the request, the commission asked for voter files organized in a way that indicated which voters had Hispanic surnames, according to newly released documents.
Their roster, like the rosters of many amateur clubs in New England, was filled with French sounding surnames: Boudreau, Proulx, Lemoine, Lessard, Martel, Picard, Roy.
Critics were disappointed that the decision did not strike down the legal prohibition against separate surnames for married couples, leaving it to the Parliament instead.
Therefore, not only are there very common surnames, but there are going to be numerous people with the same first and middle names as well.
The article also misspelled surnames of a writer who set a series of murder mysteries on the Shetland Islands and the owner of Uradale Farm.
The brides will be merging their surnames to Byrneheim, a nod to Ms. Byrne-Mitchell's maternal Irish heritage and Ms. Ettenheim's paternal German Jewish heritage.
We have a set of four theme entries with circled squares, and those circles detail, enumerate or explain the surnames of noted people named BILL.
But in "Crimes of Grindelwald," we're contending with another generation of pure-blood fanatics, and so surnames and family trees are of concern once again.
The study identified the number of Latinos by matching the names on the latest FEC filings to "Frequently Occurring Surnames" in the 2010 census report.
Opening one could be hampered by a lack of documentation, made worse by the country's severe shortage of surnames (most people share just ten of them).
Sikh men often take Singh as a last name, while women take the last name Kaur, rather than using surnames that would identify them by caste.
We meet the usual array of characters with quirky Pynchonian surnames, ones you expect might be — but are not — anagrams: Garris Plybon, Madchen Abplanalp, Tira Harpaz.
Maybe when she's old enough to be a mom, it'll be common to decide surnames with the flip of a coin, or rather, a Bitcoin algorithm.
In Anubhav Sinha's "Article 15", a privileged police officer finds himself caught in a quagmire of caste hierarchy – where life and death are steered by surnames.
Sometimes genetic matching yields only a list of surnames, or a geographical region where a family has historically lived; it just depends on who's in the database.
That's a problem, considering that "Ça" ("that") is commonly used at the beginning of sentences, and that surnames are often written in all-uppercase on government documents.
A survey in 2015 found that the most common surnames for founders of new firms in Italy were Hu, Chen and Singh, with Rossi a distant fourth.
Far fewer registered Hispanic and Portuguese Democrats voted in those three previous primaries, said Mr. Skurnik, who analyzed election data relating to social groups based on surnames.
Afterward, they asserted themselves in ways large and small, from picking their own surnames to insisting on equal dignity, especially in the case of former Union soldiers.
Field Notes As some married couples seek to join their identities, while also acknowledging they are equals, they are combining surnames or are creating entirely new ones.
The couple, who are combining their surnames, met at Columbia, from which each received a master's degree, she in human rights and he in international relations. Mrs.
Mr. Newton offers us a set of five celebrities whose surnames are reinterpreted in a not-at-all-stalkery way as verbs that are synonymous with longing.
Because SID CAESAR and LEE J. COBB both have surnames that start with C, they were listed near each other, and I made the obvious salad connection.
I had never heard of any of the players he was mentioning, even enough to know, by seeing their surnames, if it was a men's or women's tournament.
A group of teachers simultaneously released 257 more doves, one for each of the other victims, ranging in age from 256 to 246, most of them with Hispanic surnames.
Wearing a black and gold Dior dress, Portman draped herself in a black cape embroidered with the surnames of eight female directors who went unacknowledged at this year's Oscars.
Because they were married to other people, the law at the time meant he could not take either of their surnames and had to be registered by another one.
"From the whitewashing of Latinx characters to the Anglicization of Latinx actors who changed their surnames, Hollywood has not historically promoted Latinx-centered storytelling and casting," Dr. Ward says.
Australia's financial regulators got suspicious of some of international money transfer company WorldRemit's customers with surnames like "Goodnews" and "Kissmore", suspecting they were fake names used for fraudulent transfers.
He did not have access to historical income data, so instead he exploited the fact that when surnames were introduced in 17th-century Sweden they had strong class implications.
Circuit Judge Pauline Newman said the name had acquired a "secondary meaning" and "distinctiveness" through sales of Schlafly-branded beer, and that surnames could be trademarked when that occurred.
Even before N.A. was banned, members were encouraged to be mindful of operational security: they rarely used one another's surnames, and in some cases didn't know what they were.
For hours, lawmakers sat quietly and listened, reading off the surnames of the teachers and retirees and college students who accused them of disregarding their votes and dishonoring Wisconsin.
When he set it up, in 28, he and his partner at the time wanted a name that was short, worked internationally, and was not one of their surnames.
Some of their most common surnames have origins outside the English language, like Garcia and Lopez — both of which are common in California, a state with a large Hispanic population.
Both, with surnames barely pronounceable by Anglophones, are being marketed by their first names, a further democratization of the waning mystique of the maestro: thus, Mirga and Yannick to you.
The pair, who did not give their surnames, told La Repubblica on Friday that they had fallen in love while serving as missionaries in the West African country Guinea-Bissau.
A small, square-jawed, 66-year-old farmer named Somphone (some Lao farmers do not use surnames) had set the fire to clear his land for rice planting, then fled.
In the United States, where women may legally keep their surnames after marriage, there is still a strong social convention among heterosexual couples for wives to take their husbands' names.
The ambulance turned right onto his street and passed the century-old houses he still identifies by the surnames of the families who lived there 30, 40, 50 years ago.
In short, letting Dreamers work is all economic upside for the rest of our nation, with no downside unless you have something against people with brown skin and Hispanic surnames.
Six of the 15 most common surnames in the United States were of Hispanic origin in 2010, compared with four of 0003 in 2000 and none as recently as 1990.
Dr. Haight has compiled a set of eight celebrities whose surnames become verbs when the letters -ED are added to the end, and are clued as fill-in-the-blanks.
Dagoberto and Jose, who hope to get married if they reach the United States, declined to give their surnames, saying the gang that forced them out of Honduras had international reach.
They hailed from A.M.E. churches in the South and throughout the Eastern Seaboard and had surnames like Sheppard, Hamilton, Wilmore and King, which continue to be common throughout the port town.
" Flagging Hispanic surnames, he said, "gives room for no small amount of alarm in the very possibility that an American citizen could be suspected of voter misconduct based on their ethnicity.
Even without finding their surnames familiar, I'd have marveled at their accomplishments — and was astounded to learn that they not only knew each other, but had both lived in Huntsville, Ala.
Named after Velas's parents' surnames as well as her heritage (Velas from her father, Asay from her mother, and "slav" for her Slavic heritage), the Velaslavasay can be hard to classify.
She added that Ms. Inada had resisted calls to push legislation that would allow married women to use different surnames from those of their husbands, a cause important to Japanese feminists.
Orcas circle the bay in search of unsuspecting sea lion pups, two trawler wrecks cling precariously to the rocky shore, and the cemetery's tombstones are engraved with German and Nordic surnames.
"I've flown with another Megan once or twice before, but never seven so we might have to all call each other by our surnames during this very special flight," she said.
Moreover, the list of top names of purged voters also included typically Asian surnames, including Wong, Chan, Lee and Li. Statewide changes can also contribute to this kind of hyper-local discrimination.
The Y chromosomes in Flemish men with French surnames, the researchers found, had the same genetic markers found in men who live today in the region of France where their ancestors originated.
The couple, who will change their surnames to Berkman-Breen, work at the New York Legal Assistance Group, where Mr. Breen is a legal fellow and Mr. Berkman is a staff attorney.
The most common names — about one in 25 Americans are named Smith, Johnson, Williams, Brown or Jones — also have been perpetuated because slaves either adopted or retained the surnames of their owners.
Ms. Yuk was one of more than 483,248 readers who responded when The New York Times asked women around the world why they had kept or changed their surnames when they married.
Gonzales also accused Madigan and his aides of diluting the Hispanic vote in a legislative district that is about 70 percent Latino by planting two opponents with Hispanic surnames on the ballot.
Some have chosen the name of one of the staff members who have acted as their de facto parents over the last decade, and they have all ditched the surnames Deya and Odera.
Ahmed mentioned the point about surnames as he was talking about the increasingly vital role regulation and good compliance is going to play in the success of many fintech startups as they grow.
But Kirby Whiteduck (many unrelated Algonquins in the area share surnames), chief of the Pikwakanagan First Nation, west of Ottawa, said he was not prepared to spend years trying to heal the divide.
I came to identify with strangers who had skin tones like mine, or surnames that ended in "z" or "s," or those whose homes were full of Spanish sounds and Latin-American accents.

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