First and last name. Middle name included, omitted or incorrect will not matter. Today full names (for identification purposes) are required in many instances, but only for identification purposes (to distinguish between two men named John Smith, for example).
means the formal name of your organisation.
Legal last and first name of a student as verified by proof-of-birth document.
The formal term (PPG Industries, Inc., PPG Japan Ltd. and PPG Industries Ireland Limited) under which the corporation or one of its organizational elements, operates as a lawfully registered business. Generally, it is used in media only when required by law, such as for business cards, brochure address sign-offs, correspondence materials and legal documents. It is not used in signatures. It contrasts with the communicative name: PPG Industries.
Usually a person's full name as given at birth, may be changed by filing the proper forms and paying the appropriate fee.
the name of the entity that appears on all official documents or legal papers. It may be different from the trading name.
A legal name is the official name of the entity that owns a business. A sole proprietorship's legal name is the owner's full name. If a general partnership has given a name to itself in a written partnership agreement, then that name is the general partnership's legal name. Otherwise, a general partnership's legal name is the last names of the owners. For limited partnerships, LLCs, and corporations, the legal name is the name that was registered with the secretary of state.
The name one has for official purposes.
Legal name is often the name which an individual is called at birth or which appears on their birth certificate (see birth name) or marriage certificate (in those States which have a statute allowing a name change to be recorded at marriage). Most States still allow the common law of changing one's name through non-fraudulent use and this is actually the most common method since most women who marry do not petition a court under the statutorily prescribed method, but simply use a new name (typically the husband's, a custom which started under the theory of coverture where a woman lost her identity and most rights when she married). In re Natale, 527 S.W.2d 402 (Mo.