this site can help http://www.babycenter.com/0_how-to-change-your-childs-name_3641846.bc
The negligence from her father caused major psychological problems later in life.
In the US, you have options for what you would like for your name to be after marriage. You may keep your name as given, you may drop you current last name and take your spouse's, you may drop your middle name, move your maiden to middle and take your spouse's last, you may tack the new last name to the end and have 4 names, you may hyphenate, you may merge your current and your spouse's name to form a new last, etc.
To answer your immediate question: your father didn't leave you anything when he died if he didn't have a will. If your father died intestate (without a will) and owned any property at the time of his death, his property would be distributed to his heirs-at-law according to the state laws of intestacy. If he was not survived by a spouse then, generally, his property would be distributed to his children and/or the children of any deceased child. You can check the laws of his state at the related question link below. However, if your father died owning property his estate would need to be probated. An Administrator would need to be appointed by the probate court and THEN the Administrator would have the authority to settle the estate and to distribute the property according to state laws after the payment of any debts. You can check to see if a probate was ever filed in your father's estate by contacting the probate court that serves his jurisdiction by telephone or in person and asking a clerk to check the index for a file under your father's name. If a probate file exists you can go to the court and review the file. It should contain an inventory of your father's assets and a record of the distribution.
The distribution of your father's estate depends on several factors. If he and his wife owned property as joint tenants with the right of survivorship then his interest automatically passed to her when he died. If your father owned any property in his own name he could make a will and direct how that property should be distributed. If your father lived in a community property state, community property laws would affect how the property would be divided. If your father died without a will the state laws of intestacy would guide the distribution of his property. You can check your state laws at the related question link provided below. Follow the link for State Intestacy Laws and click on your state.
However the dictator or elected government wants it to.
I would change into the maiden name or take the hypen with your maiden name and your married name.
It would be Perez. Florez is the father's last name and Perez is the mother's maiden name.
As long as she wants to as well then it can be done. How you go about doing it depends on if she is a minor or not, and what state you live in. If I were you I would stroll into the City hall or community center.
I would imagine Persephone's mother and father gave her her name. She is also known as Kore or Cora in her maiden form.
Until the late 20th Century, it was the universal custom among speakers of the English language that upon marriage the woman would take the surname of her husband. The surname she had used before marriage, usually her father's surname, is called her maiden name, because it was the name she used when she was a maiden.
The last name of your mother is called her 'maiden name' and that was her real name before she got married. When she got married she would take the last name of your father. If your parents divorced sometimes the mother would keep her married name, but some mothers prefer to go back to their maiden name and because she has custody of you then she prefers to change your name from your father's last name to her own last name. If your parents were not married and living together then your father did not give you his last name and your mother is considered a 'single mother' so she would put you under her own last name.
In the English-speaking world, until recently it was the universal custom that upon marriage the woman would take the surname of her husband. Before marriage, she would use the surname of her father. When a woman was not married, she was a "maiden," a woman who never had sexual relations. So the "maiden name" of a woman is the surname she used before marriage, usually that of her father. Your mother's maiden name is the surname your mother used before she ever married, and is thus her father's (your maternal grandfather's) surname. Before computers were widely used for activities such as genealogy and fan gossip, knowledge of the maiden name of one's mother was not readily available to people outside the immediate family. That name was therefore used as a security device by banks and other institutions. When you opened an account, you gave them your mother's maiden name. Later, if you needed to change the account, your knowledge of your mothers maiden name helped to assure them that you were, in fact, the valid account holder. Now that genealogies are widely posted on the Internet this is a much less secure method of identification. If a woman never marries, her maiden name remains the same. e.g. her birth name, e.g. the name of her legal father.
You would need to petition the court for the name change to make it official. You will need that document for the social security office and schools to make sure the name change is done correctly.
Shakespeare would be his daughters maiden names.
Aerosmith would be more popular then iron maiden.
No
no they would keep the males last name and just change the abriviation.