Luann by Greg Evans and Karen Evans for September 18, 2016

  1. B986e866 14d0 4607 bdb4 5d76d7b56ddb
    Templo S.U.D.  over 7 years ago

    Any of you know any married couples where she kept her name?

     •  Reply
  2. 001
    Wesley_B  over 7 years ago

    I can’t think of any right off hand, but it doesn’t mean that there aren’t any.

    The IRS, however, may have a dim view of it.

     •  Reply
  3. Missing large
    liso20  over 7 years ago

    Haha!

     •  Reply
  4. Missing large
    liso20  over 7 years ago

    He definitely is a Degroot.

     •  Reply
  5. Blunebottle
    blunebottle  over 7 years ago

    Wait, what?!

     •  Reply
  6. Big hug
    Brdshtt Premium Member over 7 years ago

    Brad’s family speaks up in gentle protest after finding out he is willing to assume Toni’s last name:.

     •  Reply
  7. 11378c3a7e6082796a3f35eb49330550
    æ²  over 7 years ago

    “I am Degroot”

     •  Reply
  8. Missing large
    inkstains  over 7 years ago

    My wife did legally and professionally, but uses my last name socially and in connection with our daughter and her schooling.

     •  Reply
  9. Missing large
    Make Mine Marvel  over 7 years ago

    Many of my musician friends had already established something of a name for themselves before getting married. It made sense for them to keep their maiden names. The same holds true for women in any number of professional fields.

    Brad may want to consider adding Daytona as a middle name, and let Toni become Toni Louise DeGroot Daytona.

    I don’t see that it’s anybody’s business but their own, and “tradition” is really all over the place, depending on where and how far back you look.

     •  Reply
  10. Missing large
    rwjames  over 7 years ago

    By law, women in Quebec retain their family name when they marry.

     •  Reply
  11. 71  3d
    KZ71  over 7 years ago

    Mrs. DeGroot-Daytona is the way to go.

     •  Reply
  12. 95411 picture
    RandomLeeme  over 7 years ago

    It’s a tradition in my family for the woman to change her middle to name to her maiden name and take her husbands last name. So she would be “Tony Daytona DeGroot”

    My mother did is and so did I.Keeps me close to my family ties but have the same last name as my children without the hyphenation madness.

     •  Reply
  13. Missing large
    paha_siga  over 7 years ago

    i have mine hyphenated.

     •  Reply
  14. Out little avatar
    dadoctah  over 7 years ago

    I’ve known lots of women who kept their maiden names when they married, and almost as many who hyphenated both names together..Number of men I’ve known who switched to their wives’ last names? Pretty close to zero.

     •  Reply
  15. Missing large
    kenhense  over 7 years ago

    Lots of women keep their last name after getting married. With “DeGroot,” I think most women would. DeGroot sounds too much like a pig talking. But no – a guy shouldn’t take his wife’s last name – it’s just not done – and who wants to be the first? Male skirts went out of fashion real fast.

     •  Reply
  16. Missing large
    ankerdorthe  over 7 years ago

    Depends on culture and traditions. When I married the first time, my wife chose to keep her maiden surname. When I married the second time (in 1995) the law had been changed in Denmark. Now a woman or man has to opt for at namechenge. Otherwise both keep their own surname. If the woman has the more appealing surname, I know more men who have taken that. In Germany (where I live now) I have also met men who didn’t like to hyphenate their name and instead took on the surname of their wife.

     •  Reply
  17. Avatar
    Kristiaan  over 7 years ago

    Does anyone realise DeGroot is a Dutch name meaning ‘the big’ or ‘the great’?https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Groot

     •  Reply
  18. A78c357b 8cfd 4ba7 a070 703b64309e2a
    Gizmo Cat  over 7 years ago

    Yes, i did. Because i am not the property of my husband, i love him, but my name is my own identity, why should a woman change her name just because she makes a commitment to a man?

     •  Reply
  19. Image
    Aqsnt  over 7 years ago

    Hillary Rodham Clinton?

     •  Reply
  20. Missing large
    Flash Gordon  over 7 years ago

    Here are two wedding dress designs posted by ae2 on 15 Sept:♦OOPS, I can’t cut and paste them. Go back to 15 Sept 2016 and scroll down to ae2’s comment. It’s the 45th comment.

     •  Reply
  21. Missing large
    bry  over 7 years ago

    TEMPLO S.U.D. said, about 5 hours agoAny of you know any married couples where she kept her name?

    Is this a real question? Welcome to the 21st century, we’re glad to have you. Yes. I kept my own name and we’ve been married 12 years.

     •  Reply
  22. Missing large
    DeniDee  over 7 years ago

    Not only do I know MANY couple where the woman kept her name, but I also know several couples where they came up with a new last name together. For example, “Houston” and “Bauer” was changed to “Bauston”. Another couple, “Thomas” and “Cramer” BOTH went by “Thomas-Cramer” after they got married. If I were to get married, I would keep my name or come up with a combination like above. After all, he’s marrying me, not adopting me.

     •  Reply
  23. Missing large
    DeniDee  over 7 years ago

    I also know of another couple where the woman wanted to keep her last name but her fiance said that was a “deal breaker” for him, and it was “no big deal” for her to change her name. So she asked him to change his name to hers, and he about fainted. “What?” she replied, “I thought it was no big deal?” She wound up keeping her name.

     •  Reply
  24. 20200420 064419
    Keep on keepin' on  over 7 years ago

    We combined our last names. Took a bit of creative figuring, but found something new that was part his and part my last name. It was less cumbersome to me than hyphenation, and fit our ideal – that we were FROM our families, always PART of our families and history, but were now starting our own, NEW family. .That was the idea, anyway. I hyphenated my middle name to include my maiden name, though.

     •  Reply
  25. 20063942 118295443891
    upanddown17  over 7 years ago

    My wife is proud to carry my surname.

     •  Reply
  26. Tyge
    Tyge  over 7 years ago

    And now it starts?

     •  Reply
  27. Missing large
    Katecst  over 7 years ago

    My husband took mine. He was one of 5 boys. My dad is the last of his line. Our children continue my fathers last name.

     •  Reply
  28. Tyge
    Tyge  over 7 years ago

    She has a brother and niece to keep the Daytona name alive.

     •  Reply
  29. Missing large
    bsqnbay  over 7 years ago

    She should keep it. It will make things that much easier when they get a divorce. Trust me, it’s coming.

     •  Reply
  30. Aaarrrrggghhhhh
    tom_wright  over 7 years ago

    Why would a woman want to keep the name of a man she didn’t choose over the name of a man she did choose? And why shouldn’t he change his name? As long as it isn’t one of those silly-a$$ed hyphenated things – Toni Louise Daytona-DeGroot?

     •  Reply
  31. Missing large
    Ib12us  over 7 years ago

    Well they could also combine their last names like some couples: DayGroot or DeTona ;)

     •  Reply
  32. Endu
    Endunamoo  over 7 years ago

    Meh… I can understand certain reasons for not assuming the last name of the husband, but for the most part, I do not. The Hyphenation I definitely get. Someone looking for an old friend from High School, changing the last name can make you harder to find. But not taking the last name because “Reasons” no I do not like it. Just old fashioned I guess.

     •  Reply
  33. Missing large
    wschott  over 7 years ago

    Hyphenated names always seemed short sighted to me. After a couple of generations of people with hyphenated names, getting married to people with hyphenated names, what happens?

    First it’s 2, then 4, then 8, then 16. Think of the kids! By the time they have grand kids their last names could be an acronym! And the great grand kids become hyphenated acronyms!

    Instead of a legacy, they will start over with a new name, perhaps by occupation, like Greg Cartoonist, or Joe Programmer.

     •  Reply
  34. Wall e
    Steelburner Premium Member over 7 years ago

    A couple we know both hated their last names, so they combined the good parts of their last names and came up with a new one that they both took. Her last name was unpronounceable to someone not raised in a French culture, and his was just odd-sounding. Combined, it is easy to say and sounds classy, too.

    Best of both worlds.

     •  Reply
  35. Missing large
    sbwertz  over 7 years ago

    We were both in the Army when we married in 1962, and the Army rules then were that my legal name was my first, middle, maiden and husband’s names. My normal signature, however is my first name, maiden name or initial, and husband’s name.

     •  Reply
  36. V2
    Willywise52 Premium Member over 7 years ago

    Less to mess with after the divorce.

     •  Reply
  37. 0438aab5 b754 4b25 b41d bb310caeac1d
    GirlGeek Premium Member over 7 years ago

    I would definitely hyphenate, I already made up my mind years ago. I honestly thought that was what Toni was going to do.

     •  Reply
  38. Missing large
    eclark  over 7 years ago

    What last name do you give the children?

     •  Reply
  39. 1d688314 6dae 4f59 9de1 8d7ec2824944
    Mordock999 Premium Member over 7 years ago

    That’s okay Brad. Let Her Keep Her Maiden Name if it makes Her Happy. ‘Mrs. Toni Daytona-DeGroot.’

    One thing for Sure. One Day, when She Gets Mad at a Store Clerk and asks for the Manager, She’ll be Mrs. DEGROOT!!

     •  Reply
  40. Smiley tongue
    Smiley Rmom  over 7 years ago

    I replaced my middle name with my maiden name. Then, when I took care of my parents’ business, I used all three. Otherwise, just my first and married name. Less confusing, and also didn’t upset my very traditional in-laws.

     •  Reply
  41. Missing large
    vanisleson  over 7 years ago

    Don’t like the direction this is taking..SHE has NOT made a name for herself that needs to be kept.

     •  Reply
  42. Img 20230721 103439220 hdr
    kaffekup   over 7 years ago

    Wait, where’s the “Luann on her bed with Puddles and Bern” Sunday strip??

     •  Reply
  43. Slavegirl
    Luanaphile  over 7 years ago

    My son-in-law changed his last name to my daughter’s, same as mine of course. I asked his dad how that felt. He said it was a little uncomfortable at first but now he is coming around to it.

     •  Reply
  44. Dd 4
    iamnoc  over 7 years ago

    My husband took my last name when we got married…7yrs ago.. no big deal!

     •  Reply
  45. Menew
    Thomas Scott Roberts creator over 7 years ago

    And, of course, DeGroot means “The Big, The Great.”

     •  Reply
  46. Missing large
    cruiserd  over 7 years ago

    My wife & I have been together for nearly 20 years and married for almost 10. I didn’t know until she was on the phone to her sister that she had decided to take my last name in marriage. Kinda surprised me as she had established herself professionally with her current last name. Brought a tear to my eye. I know what a pain in the neck it is to do so as you have to go through all the work of changing all your ‘legal’ documents.

     •  Reply
  47. Missing large
    The Old Professor  over 7 years ago

    @Templo S.U.D. et al., My wife kept her own name, as did our best friends (several of them). My wife was married previously and went back to her “maiden” name when her divorce was finalized. As a result, I raised kids that had neither of our names. It was always chaos when we got a new mail carrier, or each year when we began to interact with new teachers at school. Would not have changed a thing, however, and I recommend to all my students (most of whom are headed to a professional life) that they keep their own name. It makes following a professional career SO much easier.

     •  Reply
  48. Slavegirl
    Luanaphile  over 7 years ago

    Those of us who are “trufans” are going to change our last names to Luann, en masse, perhaps on the day of the wedding. It is the least we can do to show our appreciation. And antifans (bah, humbug) are welcome to join us!

     •  Reply
  49. Missing large
    Aged Puppy  over 7 years ago

    My wife of 35 years (and counting) kept hers…

     •  Reply
  50. Tulips
    locake  over 7 years ago

    My husband’s last name is much easier to spell and pronounce than mine was. I was happy to take his last name.

     •  Reply
  51. Crybaby 728828 1
    SallyLin   over 7 years ago

    Had married friends who kept their last names, Smith and Jones. One child was Jane Smithjones and the other was John Jonesmith.

     •  Reply
  52. Missing large
    SofaSloth  over 7 years ago

    She should consider dropping her middle and becoming Toni Daytona DeGroot

     •  Reply
  53. Missing large
    Jonathan Kahn  over 7 years ago

    No surprise here. Brad’s clearly established himself as the girl in the relationship.

     •  Reply
  54. Image
    SukieCrandall Premium Member over 7 years ago

    The best name story i know was of an academic family. The Nazis had occupied the nation of the husband and everyone had to register. Instead of giving their birth surname he registered w a name going from the nation’s vernacular meaning “from the testicles” as a way of protesting that would be safe. Their neighbors understood and under their breath they laughed at the Nazis. When later emigrating to the U.S., the protest name, which by that time was in the records due to the Nazis, was kept.

     •  Reply
  55. Missing large
    luann1212  over 7 years ago

    I think its great that Toni asked Brad and he agrees, and even suggests that her “cool” last name could be his name instead of the other way around. There are so many layers of rationale involved in the marriage naming trope, starting with the wife being essentially part of the husband’s property interests, in effect she marries “into” his family rather than him marrying into her family. She becomes a member of his family although they are all “in-laws.” But I think the most important point with this panel is what the families behind the name represent. Daytona represents extreme beauty/looks (look at how handsome her brother is, or how cute her niece is; if she were drawn as a young adult she would be a dark-haired beauty) but a fractured background, loss of parents at an early age, instability, abuse in her background, a phoenix spirit rising as it were, who needed a Degroot, who are the salt of the earth type practical people, loving, stable, funny, close, and accepting and loving of their children, and Luann and Brad are developing with that upbringing growing normally to be the kind of kind, loving, loyal adults their parents are. This is want Toni needs, and what she loves about Brad. She will grow old with him, and he will provide her with the foundation she needs to thrive, so she values DeGroot, but is proud of and feels the honor to her deceased parents that the “cool” name Daytona represents. She will always be Toni Daytona, who is Brad DeGroots wife, and life partner. It’s so cool.

     •  Reply
  56. Flowerpower
    pickled-onions  over 7 years ago

    my ex sister in law kept my brother’s name instead of her husbands.

     •  Reply
  57. 1958edselcitationconvertible
    DavEdsel  over 7 years ago

    I have known people in all situations. I worked with a guy who took his wife’s last name because he got money from her father for doing it. I worked with a guy who was married to a doctor who kept her maiden name. I worked with a woman who kept her maiden name and their 3 boys had his last name. My wonderful wife did go through the hassle to change her last name to mine 28 years ago.

     •  Reply
  58. 1958edselcitationconvertible
    DavEdsel  over 7 years ago

    Oh, forgot about those that do the hyphenation thing. e.g. Smith-Jones etc.

     •  Reply
  59. Missing large
    dblbaraje  over 7 years ago

    A long time ago, I worked with a gentlemen whose real name was John Smith. He was so tired of everyone saying “yeah,sure! with a wink”, when he got married, he took his wife’s last name.

     •  Reply
  60. 1958edselcitationconvertible
    DavEdsel  over 7 years ago

    …As long as Toni does not change her name to Brad, or vice-versa. ☺

     •  Reply
  61. Missing large
    Darth Nefarius  over 7 years ago

    Brad really is the wife in this relationship… he should have a sex change too!

     •  Reply
  62. Missing large
    Jayneknox  over 7 years ago

    My ex-husband took my last name.

     •  Reply
  63. Dr coathanger abortions 150
    Teto85 Premium Member over 7 years ago

    Melissa Rauch (Bernadette on Big Bang Theory) kept her name AND her husband took hers.

     •  Reply
  64. Franco s trattoria
    StoicLion1973  over 7 years ago

    So, her brother doesn’t have their parents’ name? Or Shannon?

     •  Reply
  65. Underdog
    ACTIVIST1234  over 7 years ago

    As I remember, Nancy’s first impression of Toni was that Toni was “dangerous”— too attracted to risk-taking such as cars, fire-fighting, daring men, the fast life to be suitable for her son. She may have gotten part of the impression from the fact her surname is that of a race.*I’m pretty sure there is no speedway named “DeGroot”. It’s a nice, steady, safe name— like Brad. (Which is why Toni likes him.)

     •  Reply
  66. Jem character raya large 570x420
    cubswin2016  over 7 years ago

    A lot of women connect both names with a hyphen when they get married. Toni should do that.

     •  Reply
  67. Sgb device
    1soni  over 7 years ago

    I also know women who keep their married name after divorce even after their husband remarries.

     •  Reply
  68. Imagescaiw0lwc
    imbaldeagle  over 7 years ago

    A local pastor changed his last name from Butt to Cornell, his wife’s last name. Sometimes it makes sense! My ordained clergy, daughter-in-law kept her last name and their first child has a hyphenated last name.

     •  Reply
  69. Cat asks you to sign a contract
    notinksanymore Premium Member over 7 years ago

    I kept my name. My husband and I had discussed it in depth long before we got married. He had no issue with it. His mother, on the other hand, took it as a personal affront. Of course, she takes issue with most things I do, so it’s really not surprising.

     •  Reply
  70. Missing large
    guy788  over 7 years ago

    time to dump Mz Daytona. She is too high maintenance, has a skewed world view, and is probably bi polar.

     •  Reply
  71. Ligand1
    RSH  over 7 years ago

    Yes…. what does that mean? Was Toni really saying “…you can’t have my name and I won’t take your name…”..?

     •  Reply
  72. Miriam
    Kymberleigh  over 7 years ago

    Decloaking just for a minute here.I have known situations of all three variations of the traditional “bride, you take your husband’s last name, period” philosophy.1. My dentist’s wife is also a dentist and they operate a practice together, along with their son who followed in his dad’s footsteps. She still uses her maiden name professionally (which is kind of neat for me, since my dentist is my dentist because he is a friend’s brother-in-law, as in brother to the wife who keeps her last name at the office).2. My own mother replaced her middle name with her maiden name after marriage, although some legal documents through the years were executed with her original middle name. Since she passed away seven years ago, I can’t ask her about that.3. The former mayor of Los Angeles, Antonio Villaraigosa, was born Antonio Villar Jr. but when he married Corina Raigosa in 1987 they combined their last names. The marriage dissolved twenty years later but he keeps the name as he is well-known by it politically.A personal note: Thanks for all the kind words over the past couple of weeks from those regulars that miss me. I do still read the comments even though I am no longer inclined to be an active poster.It is a sad situation where one “pro” user was able to have the FAQ suppressed, yet the moderators appear unable to do anything about the idiots who continue to post things like today’s “Brad should get a sex change” comment. No wonder I don’t really want to be here.Cloaking device back on.

     •  Reply
  73. Missing large
    Kathy Carroll  over 7 years ago

    I kept my name 34 Years ago when it was not common. It is very common now. I am not a piece of property that needs its title of ownership transfered.. Get into the 21 century folks.

     •  Reply
  74. Quitn
    DukeDiamond  over 7 years ago

    Toni seems like an okay Daytona, but her brother is probably more what she’s referring to here. High praise!

     •  Reply
  75. Little lulu
    sallymargaret  over 7 years ago

    I love my husband so much I would never use anything but his last name.

     •  Reply
  76. Image
    SukieCrandall Premium Member over 7 years ago

    My own original surname name history is a slightly strange one. Many people have the same name but are not at all related. You know how a number of last names were plays upon the occupations, locations, or a father’s familiar name. So, same and similar names could result without kinship. The one i had was worked from the name of the leader of a widely popular anabaptist religious cult of the late 16th or early 17th century (offhand, i forget which) so many people had variations of it as fellow-worshippers yet were not related. People too often read too much into names. That tendency to clump and to impart meanings or characteristics without having sufficient foundation is not itself an unusual human characteristic, though it is a sad one.

     •  Reply
  77. Missing large
    nanellen  over 7 years ago
    On my da’s side, I am the third female in five generations. have no female cousins or sisters, so I use my maiden name as my legal middle name. that way I honor my dad and his side of the family. My mom was an only child.
     •  Reply
  78. 318346 10150515659374989 119105629988 11258985 63388929 n
    Airman  over 7 years ago

    Also how would you address an invitation? Mr. DeGroot & Mrs. Daytona? Or Mr. DeGroot and Ms, Daytona? Mr. and Mrs.DeGroot/Daytona? Mr. DeGroot and wife? Ms. Daytona and husband? The DeGroot – Daytona Family? And would Toni be addressed as Mrs. or Ms.? If I was to send something to a couple I know who are just shacking up, I would use separate lines for each name. If Toni went into a Hospital ICU, would Brad have to bring a copy of their marriage license before he could be admitted? Life was so much simpler when I was just waiting for Gunther and Tiffany to make out, hold hands, discover that they actually needed each other.

     •  Reply
  79. Rankin badge   tartan 2
    jrankin1959  over 7 years ago

    If Toni’s brother is any indication of what remains of the family, Brad, I’d take it as a compliment…

     •  Reply
  80. Thinker
    Sisyphos  over 7 years ago

    Perfectly okay, Toni! And, yes, Brad is totally a DeGroot, especially with his mouth full of hamburger….

     •  Reply
  81. 17089663590345538622707983594073
    David Huie Green LosersBlameOthers&It'sYOURfault  over 7 years ago

    Brad is a Degroot, through and through.

     •  Reply
  82. 100 2451
    RonBerg13 Premium Member over 7 years ago

    I’m Spartacus!! Er, uh DeGroot!

     •  Reply
  83. Missing large
    50srefugee  over 7 years ago

    That’s right, Mr. DeGroot. Why would a hottie like Toni ever saddle herself with a name like that?

    More evidence that Toni isn’t committed to this marriage.

     •  Reply
  84. Missing large
    Julius Marold Premium Member over 7 years ago

    So what are the children’s last name(s) going to be? “Daytona-DeGroot” or “DeGroot-Daytona”? Poor kids.

     •  Reply
  85. Image
    SukieCrandall Premium Member over 7 years ago

    Spoiler: the intersection of Zebo and Gunther

     •  Reply
  86. Image
    SukieCrandall Premium Member over 7 years ago

    Spoiler 2: you have heard of writer’s block? Toni’s phone call may have ended a homework block.

     •  Reply
  87. 434406237 10233969000785512 189945716777780280 n
    Terminal Frost Premium Member over 7 years ago

    In France and Belgium, women take the husband’s name, and theirs is hyphenated AFTER his. so if yours is jones and his is johnson, you become mrs jones-johnson.

     •  Reply
  88. 434406237 10233969000785512 189945716777780280 n
    Terminal Frost Premium Member over 7 years ago

    MY wife made her maiden name her middle name, partly because the last name was so long. 12 letters vs 6

     •  Reply
  89. Missing large
    phxhocking  over 7 years ago

    You might find this interesting. I changed my name over 30 years go when I married my husband. It was just how things were done. If I were to marry again (highly unlikely, I might add), I probably wouldn’t change it again. http://thefeministbride.com/why-women-change-their-last-names-after-marriage/

     •  Reply
  90. Missing large
    sueb1863  over 7 years ago

    It means she thinks you’re a low-class slob who fits an ugly last name, would be my guess.

     •  Reply
  91. Party hard cat
    Nikki  over 7 years ago

    I kept mine, after I got married. I had a hyphenated name already (stepdad and biological dad’s names), and used my married name when it came to joint stuff that we needed to sign for. When we divorced, I was given the option to keep his name, but didn’t feel it was right to do so, since we had no children or joint assets that would have made a decision like that necessary. (I’m aware that a change of name would not have changed my obligation, in that case.)

    Fortunately, we’re best friends – our close friendship outlasted our marriage by quite a few years. lol

     •  Reply
  92. Americauna chicks 1 week 003
    howtheduck  over 7 years ago

    As expected, Toni makes all the decisions and simply informs Brad of them.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Luann