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  1. When a person (traditionally the wife in many cultures) assumes the family name of their spouse, in some countries that name replaces the person's previous surname, which in the case of the wife is called the maiden name ("birth name" is also used as a gender-neutral or masculine substitute for maiden name), whereas a married name is a family name or surname adopted by a person upon marriage.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maiden_and_married_names
    A maiden name is the family nameโ€”usually the birth nameโ€”a woman has before she marries. A married name is the family name taken by a married person at the time of the marriage. The most common example is when a woman takes the family name of her spouse at the time of marriage. But sometimes a man changes his name at marriage.
    www.wikiwand.com/simple/Birth_name
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    Last year, 29.5 percent of women in the wedding pages kept their name, up from 26 percent in 2000 and a recent low of 16.2 percent in 1990. From the time that the equal rights activist Lucy Stone became famous for keeping her name when she married in 1855, maiden names have been politically charged.
    A maiden name is the family nameโ€”usually the birth nameโ€”a woman has before she marries . A married name is the family name taken by a married person at the time of the marriage. The most common example is when a woman takes the family name of her spouse at the time of marriage.
    The Civil Code provides several options for married women on what surname to take upon marriage: keep her middle name (maternal surname) and add her husband's surname to the maiden name (e.g. Maria Isabella Flores Garcia-Dimaculangan / Ma. Isabella F. Garcia-Dimaculangan );
    In the United States, the number of women who keep their maiden names has risen, though the majority still take their husbandโ€™s surname. In June, the Times reported that 30% of women in recent years have kept their maiden names in some way.
  3. Maiden and married names - WikiMili, The Best Wikipedia Reader

  4. About: Maiden and married names - DBpedia Association

  5. How American Women Fought to Keep Their Maiden Names | TIME

  6. Maiden Names, on the Rise Again - The New York Times

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