• AdNecrias
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    6 months ago

    Do you count the de’s and la’s as names? To me you’d have your mother’s surname’s R and E and father’s (L) M, plus you names LAF. Though, 3 first names, that’s going strong! You guys do use mother/father and not father/mother when ordering right?

    • KazuchijouNo@lemy.lol
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      6 months ago

      I work with data, and just today I found the longest name in our database, it was 46 characters long counting spaces and it consisted of three names and three surnames (which in reality is only two, but one is twice as long).

      Mine is 37 characters long and I have two first names and a “Del”. My girlfriend’s is 33 and she has three first names.

      The “De”, “Del”, “La”, “Los”, “De La” etc, count as part of a surname. For example “Del Río” is a surname.

      For the exaggerated example I gave before, I chose a Telenovela sounding name, those are very uncommon but do exist in the wild. For more examples, I’d recommend you check out spanish royalty names, they are a lot longer and include a bunch of titles a la ‘king of the Andals and the First Men, lord of the seven kingdoms and protector of the realm’ but with saint names and things like that.

      • AdNecrias
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        6 months ago

        Heh, I got 33 characters (31 not counting the “de”) in mine and that’s because I didn’t get more than one first name since my parents preferred it that way, but everyone here often gets two.

        In mine the de is a separator and we often omit it. So I wouldn’t count it.

        Yeah royalty names get crazy, even there noble ones, they want to display all origins and since they inbred with all the possible houses at this point they got a lot of stickers to flaunt about.

        Just found the 3 first names unusual and interesting =)