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What Your Father Name

Which is the correct format, “my father name” or “my father's name”?

The s on the end of father denotes ownership of the name! My father's name is correct ,the other doesn't sound right to me anyway!

What is your father's name?

My father’s name is Fred and I married a man named Fred.

Should my father’s first name be my first name?

No, your given name should be your first name.Your father’s name can be used as your last name.If you do not have a family name, then use your father’s first name as your last name.If you have a family name, then you can use your father’s first name as your middle name if you want.

Which is the correct father's name or father name?

It is father's name. This is called 'possessive' in English grammar. The possessive form is used with nouns referring to people, groups of people, countries, and animals. It shows a relationship of belonging between one thing and another. To form the possessive, add apostrophe + s to the noun. If the noun is plural, or already ends in s, just add an apostrophe after the s. As the 'name' belongs to 'father', you must use its possessive form.

What was James Watts fathers name?

I'm doing a poster on James Watt. You know, the guy who improved the steam engine? I know this isn't a great recourse but I can't find anywhere what James Watts fathers name was. Also, does anyone know what his father did for a living? Every biography says something different. Any sources you could list would be great but if you can't I just need a name to fill in a blank. A real name.

What is Hinata's father's name?

Hinata's father is Hiashi Hyuga, a main branch family member. He has a twin brother, Hizashi Hyuga, who was a cadet branch family member and the father of Neji. So Hinata and Neji are siblings.

What is the passive of 'what is your father's name'?

There is no passive form of the sentence "What is your father's name?" because the verb IS is not an action verb; it is a linking verb. A linking verb is like an equals sign (=). It is easier to understand this when you say:My name is Mary.Mary is my name.Those two sentences are equivalent in English; you can "switch" the subject and the complement (Mary and name) without changing the meaning. In the poster's question, we can switch WHAT and NAME, but it isn't as clear because what is a question word/pronoun. (What is your father's name? Your father's name is what?)To have a passive sentence, there has to be an active sentence. In other words, when you ask a question about "the passive," you are contrasting "passive voice" with "active voice". For example, for active voice, in English, we could say, "A dog bit the man." "Dog" is the subject of the sentence, and the dog is doing the action of biting, and "the man" is the object, or receiver, of the action.If we want to change this active voice sentence to the passive voice, we take the object of the sentence, "the man,"and make him the subject of our new sentence. But "the man" is not doing the action; he is passive, so we change the VERB from active to passive voice (active voice and passive voice always refer to verbs) Our original sentence is in the past tense (past time), so to change the verb passive we use the past tense of the verb to be + (I, he, she, it was, OR we, you, the were) the past participle of the original verb (bite, bit, BITTEN):A dog bit the man. ACTIVEThe man was bitten by a dog. PASSIVEMy mother is opening the door. ACTIVEThe door is being opened by my mother. PASSIVE.I wonder if the poster of the question is asking about something other than the passive but is calling it passive by mistake. For example, PAST TENSE of the sentence is "What was your father's name?" That sentence suggests that your father is no longer alive.

Can we ask, “What is your father name?” instead of “a father's name”?

Dear Anonymous,Neither of your choices is quite correct. You need to use the possessive for “father” (“father’s”) and the personal pronoun “your” instead of the indefinite article (“a”).You should ask, “What is your father’s name?” if you are addressing someone directly.However, if you are trying to be super philosophical without referring to a specific person, you could ask, “What is a father’s name?,” but people would look at you strangely and walk away quickly …Image of girl and her father by Alexandria Baldridge courtesy of pexels.com—Sarah M. 5/16/2018 — My father’s name was RussellORIGINAL QUESTION: Can we ask, “What is your father name?” instead of “a father's name”?

What's your name in Iceland, if you don't know your father's name/ or who your father is?

People are creative.Given that the population is just 320.000. The government often asks for paternity tests if there are a few guys who are likely. The government can be a stickler, I have heard of a school trip, where all the guys in the class were asked to do such a test, at lest most of them. I don’t know if they are as strict today as they were 10–20 some years ago, as single moms are much more common than they used to be, also a woman can have many kids, all with different dads and no one blinks an eye anymore.If there is absolutely no way to know if there is a father, or if the father is known but is a scumbag (happens), the kid can be called after the mother, like I could have been Óskson. But there are many other cases where you add Hanson, Hansen, Bl0ndal and other such names, called family names. Quite common name was Hermannsson, which translates to Soldier-son. So people are creative.When my older daughter was born, out of wedlock. She was Elsudottir until we had signed a few papers.The kid can also at anytime change his last name to be his mothers son/daughter if he/she chooses to do so at anytime.

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