On Jul 12, 2013, at 8:06 PM, Eric Burger <eburger@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I kept my maiden name, too. And I took my wife's last name when we married. This caused no end of confusion at the marriage office, with their Borland C "Turbo Vision" Text menu system app, with a space for a "maiden" name for the female to change her name, but not the male… W > Another Western option, hyphenation, was not for us. Who wants to be a Spear-Burger? Unless you want a Pepsi and chips with that. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olympia_Cafe > > On Jul 10, 2013, at 9:00 PM, Ida <ida_leung@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> >> >> Sent from my iPad >> >> On 2013-07-10, at 8:59 PM, Ida <ida_leung@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >>> One comment: I think most of the Chinese women don't change to our husband's last name. So, my husband is not Mr Leung. We love to keep our own last name. >>> >>> ...Ida >>> >>> Sent from my iPad >>> >>> On 2013-07-10, at 8:04 PM, Hui Deng <denghui02@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> >>>> Hello all >>>> >>>> We submitted two drafts to help people here to correctly call chinese people names: >>>> http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-deng-call-chinese-names-00 >>>> http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-zcao-chinese-pronounce-00 >>>> >>>> Feel free to let us know if you have any other issues? >>>> Best regards, >>>> >>>> -Hui Deng > -- Consider orang-utans. In all the worlds graced by their presence, it is suspected that they can talk but choose not to do so in case humans put them to work, possibly in the television industry. In fact they can talk. It's just that they talk in Orang-utan. Humans are only capable of listening in Bewilderment. -- Terry Practhett
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