The author born William Cuthbert Falkner is of course better known as William Faulkner (1897-1962).
William Faulkner did not actually change his last name; he was born with the surname Faulkner. However, he sometimes used the middle name "William" and the family name "Falkner" in early works, likely due to a family connection to an ancestor. The spelling "Faulkner" became the standard in his published works, and he is most widely known by this name.
My last name is Laust my grandfather was Otto Last changed the spelling in 1902 to Laust.
William Hathorne, who emigrated from England in 1630, was the first of Hawthorne's ancestors to arrive in the colonies. After arriving, William persecuted Quakers. William's son John Hathorne was one of the judges who oversaw theSalem Witch Trials. Having learned about this, the author may have added the "w" to his surname in his early twenties, shortly after graduating from college, in an effort to dissociate himself from his notorious forebears.
Kane is her middle name. people had trouble spelling and saying her name so she changed it to Kane.
Satchel Paige's parents were John and Lula Page. Their last name was originally Page but they changed the spelling to Paige in the 1920's.
Not 'his' but 'her' name. It's Venus Williams. (Please note spelling and capitals)
I think you are asking about William Jefferson Clinton who had his last name changed from Blythe to Clinton when he was a baby because his mother married Roger Clinton.
All of his three children had this surname. Although his daughters changed their surnames when they married.
Satchel Paige's parents were John and Lula Page. Their last name was originally Page but they changed the spelling to Paige in the 1920's.
her real name is Maraj but she changed it to Minaj because those rhyme & Minaj is just a different spelling of menage, as in "menage a trois" she did that to catch attention
People in Shakespeare's day had no concept of a "real name". Thus William Shakespeare's name is William Shakespeare even though the entry in the baptismal register reads "Guliemus filius Johannes Shakspere", or in English, "William the son of John Shakspere" The number of spelling variants for Shakespeare's last name is legendary, and as far as Shakespeare's contemporaries were concerned, none was more "real" than any other. Centuries of custom have hallowed the form "William Shakespeare". This is the standard spelling. You can call him "Guliemus Shakspere" if you like, but this is no more "real" than any other spelling.
The correct spelling of the adverb is finally (last, or at last).