Quoting Jeroen Ruigrok van der Werven <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
That's what you want, however, in the Netherlands the van part of the family name carries no meaning. Someone called Peter van Zandt would be sorted under the Z, not the V. And the same applies for some other countries. Take for an even nicer example a Dutch woman who married this Peter van Zandt: Ineke ten Bravoure-van Zandt. These so-called 'tussenvoegsels have no meaning when it comes to sorting. So if you would sort Peter van Zandt under the V, you'd boggle the minds of the Dutch readers at least. So they, as readers, would want that consistency intact. ;)
To add another twist: If the Dutch "van Halen" family migrates to the US and rears two sons who are fairly proficient in the hard rock business, they turn into "Van Halen"s that I'd expect to find sorted under "V". Also, isn't the scientist Paul M. Vanhoutte likely to stem from some "van Houtte" family? Apparently the interpretation of the name parts depends on the cultural context, no matter what the name originally meant to be.
regards, Markus -- Markus Hoenicka [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Spam-protected email: replace the quadrupeds with "mhoenicka") http://www.mhoenicka.de --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
