Thread:Mr B Natural/@comment-5475153-20150215180250/@comment-8161155-20150215230639

According to Google, 60 percent of women take their husband's last name, 11 percent kept their name and 8 percent hyphenated both names. I would say that nearly one fifith not completely taking their last name is a significant amount, and too great a number to assume that married couples have the same last name "by default".

Many of the things I changed were because it is stated that the women in question didn't like her husband (Abuelita) or left him (McGucket's ex-wife), and thus would be likely to change back to her original name.

Also, with the Abuelita thing, as I've stated before, we still don't know, first of all, that "Ramirez" wasn't Soos' father's name because his great-great-great-great-great-whatever grandfather was Latino. Also, since she obviously didn't like her husband, why would she kee his name after his death?

Lastly, although it is more likely than not that many of the couples have the same last name, it's still a 4/5 chance, as opposed to being 100 percent certain if we simply call her "Abuelita".