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Discover LudwigThe phrase "all surnames" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to every surname in a particular context, such as a list or a discussion about names.
Example: "In the database, we have records for all surnames registered in the city."
Alternatives: "every surname" or "all last names".
Exact(5)
The files are arranged alphabetically by patient name, but all surnames have been removed from case records to preserve confidentiality.
His full name, Burr Gore Steers, is echt WASP -- all surnames, all the time, commemorating his most famous ancestor, Aaron Burr, and a veritable gaggle of Gores.
The final list included all surnames that were believed, by consensus, to be uniquely South Asian.
If she computes the hashes for all surnames in an exhaustive list (for example, derived from a telephone book or electoral roll), and compares these with the hashes she has received from Alice and Bob, she may be able to discover the original values.
In addition, since the SMPBC database retains both 'place of birth' and 'ethnic group' as reported by the client, all surnames were listed from this source for Chinese women reporting 'Chinese' as their ethnicity, South Asian women reporting 'India', and Iranian women reporting 'Iran'.
Similar(55)
In my own case, were I to look at the form you need to fill out to change your name, I would see instead the medieval script, "she has lost all surname but wife of".
Once the train has made all the Surname-on-the-Hudson stops, I am met at Ossining station by Kate Powers and RTA's founder, Katherine Vockins.
You'll notice I've put all the presenters' surnames in brackets in this piece because, when you're a preteen, Play School presenters are known only by their given names; they're the Prince, Madonna and Cher of childhood.
Just think about all these English surnames which come from professions that do not exist anymore.
I think that technical people underestimate how useful regexps are for "normal" people, whether a receptionist labouriously copy-pasting all the surnames from a word-processor document into a spreadsheet, a school administrator trying to import an old set of school records into a new system, or a mechanic hunting through a parts list for specific numbers.
Alternatively, WOTAN might file all unknown surnames as 'Who'.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com