Anonymous wrote:I adopted my daughter as a single mom. She has my name of course. I met and married my husband 3 years later. He already had 2 very young boys . So he and the boys had his name and I and my daughter have our name.
We were a family of 5 with 3 kids under age 4!
I know one family decided that the girls would have his last name and the boys would have her last name. They ended up having two girls.Anonymous wrote:In what situation would the older child and father have the same last name and the younger child and mom have the same last name?
The parents are married. I totally get the mom not having the same last name as the husband and kids. I kept my maiden name for years. I just thought it was odd when half the kids had the dad’s name and not the other child.
This family doesn’t appear like a blended family but I guess they could all be the same race and siblings just look really alike.
Anonymous wrote:It keeps both names going. I see nothing wrong with it. My husband suggested we give our kids my name only.
Anonymous wrote:I adopted my daughter as a single mom. She has my name of course. I met and married my husband 3 years later. He already had 2 very young boys . So he and the boys had his name and I and my daughter have our name.
We were a family of 5 with 3 kids under age 4!
Anonymous wrote:I adopted my daughter as a single mom. She has my name of course. I met and married my husband 3 years later. He already had 2 very young boys . So he and the boys had his name and I and my daughter have our name.
We were a family of 5 with 3 kids under age 4!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess no one is ever just curious about things. Op, I would be curious too.
Op here. I was just curious. And we know plenty of divorced and blended families. I’m very well aware kids can have different fathers. I just thought this situation was a little odd because siblings look the same as in they look totally like full siblings.
There was an Asian family with all 4 family members with different last names. Also seem like a non blended family. I would never ask in real life. That’s why I asked on an anonymous forum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess no one is ever just curious about things. Op, I would be curious too.
Op here. I was just curious. And we know plenty of divorced and blended families. I’m very well aware kids can have different fathers. I just thought this situation was a little odd because siblings look the same as in they look totally like full siblings.
There was an Asian family with all 4 family members with different last names. Also seem like a non blended family. I would never ask in real life. That’s why I asked on an anonymous forum.
Not sure what specific ethnicity you could be referring to, but in parts of South India women take the first name of their father as their last name, and when they are married, they take their husband's first name. I know a family where the husband's last name is his dad's first name, his wife still had her dad's first name as her last name,(essentially her maiden name), their children had the first name of husband as their last names.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess no one is ever just curious about things. Op, I would be curious too.
Op here. I was just curious. And we know plenty of divorced and blended families. I’m very well aware kids can have different fathers. I just thought this situation was a little odd because siblings look the same as in they look totally like full siblings.
There was an Asian family with all 4 family members with different last names. Also seem like a non blended family. I would never ask in real life. That’s why I asked on an anonymous forum.
Not sure what specific ethnicity you could be referring to, but in parts of South India women take the first name of their father as their last name, and when they are married, they take their husband's first name. I know a family where the husband's last name is his dad's first name, his wife still had her dad's first name as her last name,(essentially her maiden name), their children had the first name of husband as their last names.
I’m still disturbed that you think you can tell a “blended” family from a non blended family and that you would even bother to try?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess no one is ever just curious about things. Op, I would be curious too.
Op here. I was just curious. And we know plenty of divorced and blended families. I’m very well aware kids can have different fathers. I just thought this situation was a little odd because siblings look the same as in they look totally like full siblings.
There was an Asian family with all 4 family members with different last names. Also seem like a non blended family. I would never ask in real life. That’s why I asked on an anonymous forum.
Not sure what specific ethnicity you could be referring to, but in parts of South India women take the first name of their father as their last name, and when they are married, they take their husband's first name. I know a family where the husband's last name is his dad's first name, his wife still had her dad's first name as her last name,(essentially her maiden name), their children had the first name of husband as their last names.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess no one is ever just curious about things. Op, I would be curious too.
Op here. I was just curious. And we know plenty of divorced and blended families. I’m very well aware kids can have different fathers. I just thought this situation was a little odd because siblings look the same as in they look totally like full siblings.
There was an Asian family with all 4 family members with different last names. Also seem like a non blended family. I would never ask in real life. That’s why I asked on an anonymous forum.