He was henceforth, however, better pleased with his name, for he fancied in it something of the dignity of a doubledsurname.
2
"Your family has a DOUBLEsurname, then?"
1
I do not have a double-barrelledname here either, he thought.
2
Susanna, 42: I had a double-barrelledname, and I just dropped his and started using back my maiden name.
3
Alex Liddington-Cox writes in Essential Baby that his child will be taking their mother's surname, because of the hell of a having a double-barrelledname.
4
"Awkward thing sometimes having a double-barrelledname," he continued.
1
As a high-school student drawn to radical leftist politics, he dropped his double-barrelledsurname.
2
If only he had a double-barrelledsurname, he'd be a certainty for the title.
3
Ivan Ivanovitch had a rather strange double-barrelledsurname-Tchimsha-Himalaisky-whichdid not suit him at all, and he was called simply Ivan Ivanovitch all over the province.
1
Her relations address letters to our children using an invented hyphenatedsurname.
2
At the Smithsonian in Washington, the curator of coins and medals was a gentleman with a dry voice and a hyphenatedsurname.
3
It is long since that Leith Clay-Randolph (note the hyphenatedsurname) knocked at the back door of Idlewild and melted the heart of Gunda.