"Your name is..." isgrammaticallycorrect.Whereas "Your name is called..." is bad grammar.
"Called" is a simple past tense verb that indicates an action taken in the past, while "called as" is used to identify someone or something by a specific title or name.
irony
There is no difference. That's like asking the difference between noon and 12:00pm. In the UK the time of year when the leaves turn brown - around September - October - November - is called 'Autumn'. In the USA it is called 'the Fall'. It's simply a question of two names for the same thing.
Measured in pips, spread is the term used for a difference between bid and ask pricing. This is the cost of an order placement for a trader.
There is a type of puzzle named spot the difference
Porifera is name of phylum and animals belonging to it are called poriferans.
what is the difference between the common and scientific name of an organisms
A band-aid is the brand name, while a bandage is what its really called.
There is no difference. Prairie schooner is a poetic name for a covered wagon (technically called a Conestoga wagon).
The difference between succeeding terms in a sequence is called the common difference in an arithmetic sequence, and the common ratio in a geometric sequence.
Contour interval.
The difference between actual quantity and standard quantity is called the material quantity variance.
The name given to the difference in pitch between two notes is called an interval. This difference is measured in semitones or whole tones, and it determines the quality of the interval, such as perfect, major, minor, augmented, or diminished.
"Called" is a simple past tense verb that indicates an action taken in the past, while "called as" is used to identify someone or something by a specific title or name.
There is no difference, the terms are synonymous.
The difference between the greatest and least numbers in a set of data is called the range.
The name for the elevation difference between adjacent contour lines is the contour interval.