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{{examples}}
== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==
* "Scar" in ''[[Fullmetal Alchemist (manga)|Fullmetal Alchemist]]''. When Yoki asks Scar's name, Scar responds that to Ishvalans, a person's name is the most important thing; the name is regarded as a gift from God. So Yoki asks again, and Scar's response is "I threw it away. I threw away my own ''name''." Yoki doesn't dare ask him again. At the end of the series, {{spoiler|he ''still'' refuses to give his name and says you can just call him whatever you want to.}}
** A 4-koma theater joked that his real name is [[Overly Long Name|Jugemu-jugemu Gokōnosurikire Kaijarisuigyo-no Suigyōmatsu Unraimatsu Fūraimatsu Kūnerutokoroni-sumutokoro Yaburakōjino-burakōji Paipopaipo-paiponoshūringan Shūringanno-gūrindai Gūrindaino-ponpokopīno-ponpokonāno Chōkyūmeino-chōsuke]]
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* In ''[[Ranma ½]]'', Principal Kuno's first name is never given, and eventually he's referred to only as "[[Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep"|Principal]]." Likewise the Jusenkyo Guide (whose daughter IS named,) the Gambling King, and the Dojo Destroyer.
* None of the sisters in ''[[Sister Princess]]'' have family names and until the anime Wataru was only ever refered to by a form of 'brother'. This makes knowing whether they're half sisters or full sisters to each other impossible to tell.
* This was revealed to be the case with {{spoiler|Tobi}} in ''[[Naruto]]''. The one notable name he went by was a lie to lend him credibility; he prefers to remain nameless and focus only on his end-game. On chapter cover simply refereedreferred to him as "The Masked Man".
** Revealed to be the case with the bijuu. Each bears a name given to them by {{spoiler|the Sage of Six Ways}} but because of the general belief that they're little more than mindless energy, few humans bother to learn a name beyond their title.
** {{spoiler|As of Chapter 568, the names of the Four Tails and the Nine Tails have been revealed: [[Shout-Out|Son Goku and Kurama]] respectively.}} Whether or not Shukaku is the correct name for the One Tail is uncertain.
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* ''[[The Idolmaster (anime)|THE iDOLM@STER]]'' - The Producer.
* ''[[A Certain Magical Index]]'' has characters only referred to as "Aogami Pierce" ("blue haired guy with piercings") and "The girl in the dress".
* ''[[One Piece]]''.
** Baby-5 from ''[[One Piece]]''. Initially it was implied that her cruel mother who abandoned her didn't bother to name her children, simply labeling them with numbers, meaning "Baby #5" was the only name she had. This is not true, but regardless, her actual name is unrevealed.
** Only one of the Five Elders - [https://onepiece.fandom.com/wiki/Jaygarcia_Saturn Jaygarcia Saturn] - has been named, though seeing as it took a long time for this revelation, the other four might be named eventually.
 
== [[Comic Books]] ==
* ''[[X-Men (Comic Book)|X-Men]]'' comics have several examples:
** [[Wolverine]] was known only as Logan (and he was around for several years before even that much was revealed). He had amnesia, and no one knew what his real name was. Recently, in his origin series, Wolverine's name was revealed to be James Howlett, having stolen the name 'Logan' from his family's groundskeeper, who turned out to Wolverine's biological father. This information is not used in most adaptations, although in ''[[X-Men (film)|X-Men]] Origins: Wolverine'' Sabretooth refers to him as 'Jimmy', and his full name is the same as it is in the comics.
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* The burglar that kills Ben Parker in ''[[Spider-Man]]'' mythos was not named till 1996 (34 years after his debut), and then only a presumed family name, when Ben Reily's girlfriend Jessica Carradine is revealed to be his daughter. This is the basis for the name Dennis Carradine used in the [[Spider-Man (Film)|Tobey Maguire films]], one of the few canons he is named in.
 
== [[Fan Works]] ==
* In the [[Alternate Universe Fic]]/[[Spice Girls]] fic ''[https://www.wattpad.com/story/163260272-astral-journey-it's-complicated Astral Journey: It's Complicated]'' (in which the group are athletes), despite it being mentioned in the synopsis, none of the characters -- including her flatmates and other teammates -- mention the narrator by her name, Emma. This eventually abverted when Geri talks about Grover, their pet cat.
 
== [[Film]] ==
* In [[Martin Scorsese]]'s feature debut ''Who's That Knocking At My Door'', the love interest of Harvey Keitel is simply named "The Girl".
* The film ''Blindness'' does not name any characters, main or otherwise.
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* ''[[Fight Club]]'': The Narrator is the official title of the protagonist of the movie. {{spoiler|the trope is Subverted though}}
* ''[[Sucker Punch]]'': Most of the characters only have nick names to go upon, even the doctor. {{spoiler|subverted with Blue and Vera}}
* In ''[[E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial]]'', neither the title character's name nor the namenames of his planet or species is ever given.
* [[Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep"|The Mayor]] from ''[[The Nightmare Before Christmas]]'' (though some of the merch calls him [[Punny Name|Hizzonor]]). Most of the citizens also seem to not have names (The Clown With The-Tear-Away-Face, The Wolf Man, etc).
* [[The Hero|The Janitor]] from ''[[Willy's Wonderland]]''. One could consider him a [[Captain Ersatz]] of [[Five Nights at Freddy's (video game)|Mike Schmidt]], but he doesn't talk, nothing is known about his past, and his name is never stated. He's just "The Janitor" [[Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep"|because that's his job.]]
 
== [[Literature]] ==
* The 1995 novel ''Blindness'', by José Saramago, does not reveal the names of any characters, main or otherwise. Instead they each receive a distinctive appellation: "The doctor's wife", "The Girl with Dark Glasses", etc.
* The protagonists of ''[[Animorphs]]'' never revealed their last names, ostensibly for security reasons; they occasionally said in narration that they might not even be using their real first names. {{spoiler|In book 53, a full name was finally given: Jake Berenson. He even revealed his age (16) and how long it had been since the series started (3 years). This underscored the recent events in which the Yeerks had finally discovered exactly who the Animorphs were, making the protection of that information a moot point.}}
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* In another Remarque novel, ''Spark of Life'', the main character is called 509, his serial number in the concentration camp, where the story sets (though he casually mentions his real name once).
* In ''[[Invisible Man (novel)|Invisible Man]]'' by Ralph Ellison, if a complex character is introduced before their personality is fully explained, they're often not given a full name until we learn their true nature. Some characters go without a name throughout, most notably the narrator, who doesn't quite understand himself; even the assumed name the Brotherhood gives him is deliberately withheld. This is also used with such characters as the Founder to show that [[No Celebrities Were Harmed]].
* Captain Nemo of ''[[Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea|20000 Leagues Under The Sea]]'', [[Lampshade Hanging|whose pseudonym means "nobody"]].
** In ''[[The Mysterious Island]]'', the sequel, he identifies himself as {{spoiler|Prince Dakkar}}
* The King, in James Clavell's ''[[Asian Saga|King Rat]]''. (At the end of the book, he gives "King" as his surname.)
* In Amy Hempel's story "In the Cemetary Where Al Jolson is Buried," the main characters are referred to as "I" and "she."
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* The first person narrator of [[Tanith Lee]]'s ''[[Biting the Sun]]'' duology, ''Don't Bite the Sun'' and ''Drinking Sapphire Wine''.
* The title character of Gaston Leroux's ''[[The Phantom of the Opera]]'' gives his first name as "Erik," although he later claims he got the name "by accident" so it's entirely possible that's another alias.
* Very few human characters in [[C. S. Lewis|CS Lewis]]' ''[[The Screwtape Letters]]'' have any name given; the main one is known only as the Patient. This both shows the devils' lack of personal concern, and helps establish the Patient as a sort of Everyman.
* Paul Theroux wrote two novels starring Spencer Savage—called that on the back covers, but in the text, he is unnamed until the second-to-last page of the second book, ''The London Embassy.'' His name is revealed when he is asked, {{spoiler|"Do you, Spencer Michael Savage, take this woman to be your lawful wedded wife?}}
* The protagonist of Anita Amirrezvani's novel ''The Blood of Flowers'' has no name. [[Word of God]] says that it was a tribute to the nameless artisans of Iran, where the story takes place.
* In Geoffrey Storey's ''[[The Colonial Boy]]'', the main character is known only as "The Boy" {{spoiler|and becomes The Youth, The Student, and finally The Commando as the story progresses.}}
* The narrator and protagonist of Glen Cook's ''[[Garrett P.I.|"Garrett, P.I."]]'' series has yet to reveal his full name. We know his mother's pet name for him ("Wart") and the nickname he went by in the Marines ("Wrecker"), and it's been implied that he was named after some long-dead relative, but Cook's still being coy about his given name.
** In the same series, Garrett's Loghyr partner is known only as "the Dead Man". It's yet to be established if members of the Loghyr race have names at all, or if the Dead Man simply prefers to remain anonymous.
* None of the characters in ''Surfacing'' by Margaret Atwood have full names. The narrator is never named, and her three companions are only known by their first names. The narrator refers to people in her past only as "my father", "my mother", "my brother", etc.
** Similarly, in ''The Handmaid's Tale'' we only learn the narrator's real name by implication (the women being trained as handmaids whisper their names to each other: there are five, and by the book's end we hear later news of all but one). Similarly, we never learn the Commander's surname, and only know his first name because the narrator is called Offred.
* Major _____ de Coverly of ''[[Catch-22]]'', along with many characters known solely by [[Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep"|descriptions]], such as Nately's Whore and Nately's Whore's Kid Sister.
* The rulers of the foremost riding in Armada, from ''The Scar'', are known only as the Lovers.
* The main character of the Montmorency novels is known only by "Montmorency" in his upper-class persona (the brand of satchel he was carrying when arrested), or "Scarper" in his lower-class one (the last word his accomplice had yelled to him before his capture). His childhood name is eventually revealed in the fourth book, but even this is just the one he'd been assigned at the orphanage.
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* A minor character in ''To Kill A Mockingbird'' is Mr. X Billups. Jem explains to Dill that X really is his name, not an initial.
* Although Holly refers to the narrator as Fred for the first half of [[Breakfast at Tiffany's]], he is never properly introduced.
* In Nick Harkaway's ''[[The Gone-Away World]]'', the protagonist never receives a name, because {{spoiler|Gonzo forgot to give him one}}. The whole book is in first person, so it's never really brought to your attention until the point where the protagonist is {{spoiler|giving a rousing speech to inspire the Haulage Co. to go rescue Gonzo}} and he tries to introduce himself. This leads to an uncomfortable [[Beat]] while he realizes he doesn't actually have a name.
* [[Henry James]] seemed to like creating heroines without names in his short stories—such as the heroine of "In The Cage" and the governess of "The Turn of the Screw"—despite naming other major characters such as their co-workers and family.
* ''[[The Dresden Files|]]'': John Marcone]] is an alias, albeit one he's adopted so permanently he says he rarely thinks of his real name.
* In [[Jasper Fforde]]'s ''[[Thursday Next|Lost In A Good Book]]'', Thursday's father. She [[lampshade]]s it {{spoiler|after his death}}.
* Used twice in Hodgson's ''[[The House on the Borderland]]'', in which neither the fisherman from the [[Framing Device]] nor the writer of the journal are named. A footnote refers to the latter only as "The Recluse".
* In ''The Nanny Diaries'', hardly any of the main characters get a real name: the titular nanny's name [[His Name Really Is "Barkeep"|is Nanny]], the last name of the family for whom she works is X, and her love interest who lives in the building is merely nicknamed "Harvard Hottie" or "H.H.," even once they enter a relationship. (This changes in the sequel, ''Nanny Returns.'')
* This is a plot point in ''The Book of Three'', the first book of the ''[[Prydain Chronicles]]''. The Horned King can only be defeated by one who knows his true name. The reader never finds out what that name is; when Princess Eilonwy asks Prince Gwydion what it was, he says that it will have to remain a secret, "but I assure you it was not half as pretty as your own."
* In ''[[Dreams of Joy]]'', Joy's mother-in-law is referred to by her mother as "Joy's Mother-in-Law", because she had no name outside of her husband's surname. She went by Fu-shee when she got married. This was [[Truth in Television]] for poor Chinese women, who often weren't given names or given names like "hope for a son".
* Serena Mackesy's ''The Temp'' has a first person narrator, and since everyone she works for is to much of a wazzock to ask for her name, you don't get it until the end of the sixty-fifth chapter.
* [[Gene Stratton Porter]] was strange about names. Her self-insert in a couple of her books is called, in both narrative and dialogue, "the Bird Woman". In ''Freckles'' the title character gives his name as only that, claiming that as an orphan and (he believes) a bastard he has no right to any other. By the last chapter he and we learn his real name, but we never do learn names for his love-interest, the Swamp Angel, or her father, the Man of Affairs.
* In ''[[Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close]],'' Oskar's mother and grandmother are never named, and he refers to them only in those terms.
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** Her parents aren't given first names, either.
* The exploits of one of the protagonists in the ''Dance of the Gods'' series is narrated in a first-person "noir" style instead of the regular third-person style of the other protagonists, and he is never addressed by name. At the [[Brick Joke|end of the book]] it turns out that he's {{spoiler|under a "spell of namelessness"}}.
* NoThe Namechild Given -of Ti-Jeanne from Nalo Hopkinson's child''[[Brown Girl in the Ring]]'' is named only '"Baby'".
* Many, if not most, of the characters in ''[[Someone Else's War|Someone Elses War]]'' are known by first name or nickname. Not counting the main character and his family, a grand total of ''three'' characters ever get a full name.
* The protagonist from ''Countdown to Kindergarten'' and ''Mrs. Watson Wants Your Teeth,'' a worrywart little girl.
* "Miss Girdle Fitz-Snugglie", from [[Robert A. Heinlein]]'s ''[[Podkayne of Mars]]'', is a name the title character initially uses for a famous socialite she meets on a spaceliner, as a bit of private snark. (The book is presented as Poddy's [[Diary]].) However, when "Girdie" turns into the [[Cool Big Sis]] and Poddy learns that her life is far from glamour and happiness, Poddy explicitly chooses to keep using the pseudonym in order to protect "Girdie"'s privacy.
 
== [[Live -Action TV]] ==
 
* Oz on ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]'', whose full name was revealed after he had left Sunnydale.
** Also, "The Host of Caritas" was not given an official name (even to the other characters) until late into the second season of ''[[Angel]]''. His full name is "Krevlorneswath of the Deathwok Clan". As noted before, he's not fond of it:
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''(They are still blank)''
'''Angel''': Okay, now I feel old. }}
*:* One might wonder why he didn't shorten it to ''Krev'' instead of ''Lorne'', so that he could say it's short for ''Crèvec?ur'' (heartbreaker). Okay, maybe that's too recherché.
*:* Darla's human name is not known - she was named Darla by the Master. And being a whore, she probably wouldn't have used it anyway.
*:* Faith's surname was not revealed as Lehane (probably a [[Shout-Out]] to the crime writer Dennis Lehane) until after the TV show ended. It was first used in the support material for the official role-playing game.
*:* Who was he before he was Adam? Did Maggie name him that?
**::* Before Adam? [[Dream Sequence|Not a man among us can remember.]]
*:* And the demon from the musical episode was never identified by name during the episode. Though now he is called "Sweet" as his costume designer is credited at the end of the show. This is actually odd for a Buffy Episode because the formula is usually 'Weird Stuff Happens/People Die/stuff get stolen> the gang researches > they learn the threats name > they vanquish said threat.' But in this episode Sweet simply leaves without actually engaging in violence (aside from people bursting into flames...)
* ''[[Get Smart]]'' has, er, a ''number'' of examples:
** Agent 99. Her lack of a name becomes a running gag. The day she gets married to Max someone sneezes when her name is said. A popular misconception is that she revealed her name in one episode as "Susan Hilton," but that was just an alias.
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* Fez, ''[[That '70s Show]]''. Fez is short for Foreign Exchange Student. At one point, someone asks his real name and he is drowned out by a school-bell while seen saying an incredibly long name. (In that scene, actor Wilmer Valderrama was actually saying the first names of all the cast members.) His friends call him Fez because his real name is too long to easily remember or pronounce.
* Number Six and many other residents of The Village in ''[[The Prisoner]]''. (It is officially denied that Six is John Drake, a spy previously played by the same actor.)
* On ''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]'', The Doctor (the Emergency Medical Hologram, not [[Doctor Who|that one]]) went seven years without getting a name that stuck. In the last episode, he's portrayed as finally having settled on "Joe," but that was in a future that got erased.<ref>[[Word of God]] is that he was originally named Dr Zimmerman in the script, but they managed to go long enough without mentioning his name onscreen that it became a plot point of its own.</ref>
** It's possible that Odo fits this trope. His name comes from what was written on his jar, the Cardassian words "Odo'Ital" meaning "unknown sample".
** None of the Changelings have names, the 'leader' only goes by 'female Changeling' or 'Founder'. Odo is only given a name because he interacts with 'solids' and we like to place names on things.
* This trope turns up in mainstream shows too: British nostalgic hospital drama ''[[The Royal]]'' has a major character known only as Matron.
* Mac Taylor on [[CSI: NY]]. Mac *can* be a full name, but we've never found out for sure. Gary Sinise has said his name is McCanna (after Gary's son), but they've never said it onscreen.
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* In ''[[The X-Files]]'', Deep Throat's real name is not given until the fourth season, despite the character's prominence in the first season. The second season premier implies that Mulder knows it, but he never speaks it onscreen. In the fourth season flashback episode, he and the [[Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep"|Cigarette Smoking Man]] are the main characters, and the Cigarette Smoking Man calls him {{spoiler|Ronald}}.
** The Cigarette Smoking Man is later referred to by the name {{spoiler|C.G.B. Spender}}, though Scully believes it's just an alias and not his real name.
** ''The X-Files'' was full of this trope, many of the main conspirators are never named and are often known solely by the descriptive terms used in the credits. There's Mr. X, The Well-Manicured Man, The Grey-Haired Man, Second Elder, Third Elder, Toothpick Man, Quiet Willy, The Red-Haired Man, and so on and so forth.
* One of the main characters in ''[[Scrubs]]'' is simply known as 'The Janitor'. His name tag and uniform also just say 'Janitor', and he even calls himself "Dr. Jan Itor" when pretending to be a doctor. It was said (jokingly) that when the Janitor's name is revealed, the series will be over. One episode features JD discovering that the Janitor had a role in the film "The Fugitive", suggesting that the Janitor is actually supposed to be the actor portraying him (Neil Flynn), fallen on hard times.
** More janitor name silliness: in one episode he fools J.D. by signing his name as "Dr. Rotinaj," and when J.D. points out that this is "janitor" backwards, an Asian doctor walks by:
{{quote|'''Janitor:''' Hello, Dr. Rotinaj.
'''Dr. Rotinaj:''' Hello, Mister Clean-Up-Man. }}
*:* In the last episode though, {{spoiler|he reveals to JD that his name is "Glenn Matthews". He never revealed his name, because no one ever asked. It's not sure if this is his real name, as seconds later someone calls him "Tony".}} [[Word of God]] states that, yes, his name is indeed {{spoiler|Glen Matthews.}}
*** [[Word of God]] states that, yes, his name is indeed {{spoiler|Glen Matthews.}}
* ''[[Heroes (TV series)|Heroes]]'' has a number of examples:
** Noah Bennet is first credited as "Horn-Rimmed Glasses," referring to his eyewear. In the third episode of the series he is revealed to be Claire's father, and so became referred to by various characters as "Mr. Bennet," but his first name remains a mystery. A lampshade is hung on this in one episode, in which his wife says, "It's so strange that you all refer to him as 'Mr. Bennet'. I've always just known him as--" [[The Un-Reveal|before she is distracted by her dog]]. He finally reveals his first name, Noah, in the first season finale.
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* On ''[[Chuck]]'', Sarah's real full name is unknown as of yet. Her other known childhood aliases are Jenny Burton, Rebecca Franco, and Katie O'Connell. As Bryce Larkin's partner, she was known as Mrs. Anderson on some missions. She introduces her father as Jack Burton; it's likely that was just the first name she thought of, since Chuck knew the Burton alias but not that it was an alias, and Jack was willing to play along. She does tell Chuck her middle name is Lisa, and from context it's likely that much is true.
** In "Chuck Versus the Fake Name", Sarah's real name is found out: {{spoiler|Sam}}
* Nobody knows C.C. Babcock's full name in ''[[The Nanny]]'' until it's revealed in the final episode as {{spoiler|Chastity Claire.}}
* In ''[[Leverage]]'', the characters of Parker and Sophie Devereaux are both within this trope. Parker is [[Only One Name]] and as a foster child may have no other name, nor a need for one as she has no life outside being a thief. "Sophie Devereaux" is just Sophie's favorite of many aliases, and her real is yet to be revealed.
* GOB's wife on ''[[Arrested Development (TV series)|Arrested Development]]'' is never given a name, to reflect the fact that GOB doesn't know it. She's listed as "Bride of GOB" in the credits and "Wife of GOB" in other material. GOB makes several guesses to it, including "Krindy", "Amy" (Amy Poehler, Will Arnett's wife, plays the role), and "Saul" (actually her divorce lawyer). Michael knows what it is, but the opportunity never arises for him to use it.
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** Only William Raines, Debbie Broots, and Catherine Parker (née Jamieson) get full names.
** Mr. Lyle is an interesting case, as that's an alias he adopted, and he may not even have a first name. One episode does reveal his full childhood name -- {{spoiler|Bobby Bowman}}—but he would probably argue that [[Do Not Call Me "Paul"|that's not his name any more]], if it ever really was.
* ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series|Star Trek]]'' has a few prominent examples:
** ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series]]''
** The character played by Majel Barrett in the first series pilot, "The Cage," is referred to only as "Number One," the unofficial nickname attached to her position as Captain Pike's first officer.
*** NeitherThe ofcharacter theplayed twoby mainMajel Romulan adversariesBarrett in the first series werepilot, "The Cage," everis referred to byonly nameas "Number One," butthe simplyunofficial nickname attached to her position as "theCaptain RomulanPike's Commanderfirst officer."
*** Neither of the two main Romulan adversaries in the series were ever referred to by name, but simply as "the Romulan Commander."
** ''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]'':
* On ''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]'',** The Doctor (the Emergency Medical Hologram, not [[Doctor Who|that one]]) went seven years without getting a name that stuck. In the last episode, he's portrayed as finally having settled on "Joe," but that was in a future that got erased.<ref>[[Word of God]] is that he was originally named Dr Zimmerman in the script, but they managed to go long enough without mentioning his name onscreen that it became a plot point of its own.</ref>
* ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]'',
** The [[Mysterious Backer|Traveler]] claims his name is unpronounceable by humans.
** NoneIt's ofpossible that Odo fits this trope. His name comes from what was written on his jar, the ChangelingsCardassian words "Odo'Ital" meaning "unknown sample". When other members of his species are encountered, none have names, the 'leader' only goes by 'female Changeling' or 'Founder'. Odo is only given a name because he interacts with 'solids' and we like to place names on things.
** Lwaxana Troi's valet has a name - Mr. Homm - but the name of his home planet and species have never been given.
* The BBC show ''[[Bugs]]'' manages this with the three stars, Nick Beckett, Ros Henderson and 'Ed', who has no specified surname.
* In ''[[NCIS: Los Angeles]]'', the leading agent of the team, Callen, has no first name. Not even ''he'' knows his first name. All we know is that it starts with "G". The others refer to him as "Callen", "Agent Callen", "G. Callen", "G", or "Mr. Callen". Even during the most recent season finale where {{spoiler|Hetty leaves her position at NCIS to get a Romanian crime family off Callen's back by faking G's death certificate (complete with video evidence of G's death), we never know his first name.}} To maintain the mystique surrounding G's name {{spoiler|they probably had the first name on the form illegible except for the G, [[Genre Savvy|knowing that someone with a DVR could just pause at that exact moment to see it]].}}
* ''[[Glee]]'': Puck's little sister. Granted, she's only shown up once so far, and that was in a flashback, but it still poses a problem for fanfic writers who want to include her. [[Fanon|Suprisingly many of them]] call her Sarah.
* ''[[Dr. TerriblesTerrible's House Ofof Horrible]]'' parodied this with a voodoo man who said "My name is...unimportant." Later, we see on his passport that his name is actually "Unim Portant".
* Maw Broon, Paw Broon, Grandpaw Broon, the Twins and the Bairn in ''[[The Broons]]''.
** Parodied in a ''[[Naked Video]]'' sketch, where the Twins and the Bairn were taken into care, to be looked after by someone who'd give them care and attention...and names.
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* On TV and in the radio, ''[[The Lone Ranger]]'' was this trope. We know his last name was Reed, like his brother and great grand-nephew ''[[The Green Hornet]]'', but we never learn his first name.
 
== [[Music]] ==
 
== Music ==
* The main character of ''[[The Black Parade]]'' is never named in the album itself, and elsewhere is known only as "the Patient".
* Very few of the characters in the [[Ayreon]] albums have names; most go by descriptions like "Best Friend" or "the Knight."
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* An animal variant is ''[[A Horse With No Name]]'' by the band America.
 
== [[Newspaper Comics]] ==
 
== Newspaper Comics ==
 
* 'The Dog' in ''[[Footrot Flats]]'' has such an [[Embarrassing First Name]] that he never allows it to be said or revealed in any way in the comic, and holds a grudge against Aunt Dolly for giving him the name.
* ''[[Peanuts]]'' examples:
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** In one episode of the ''Dilbert'' TV show, the Boss signs a delivery form. The delivery man looks at the clipboard incredulously, and says "that's your name?" Ee never see it.
** The hyper-intelligent Garbage-Man: In an early strip, Dilbert tels another character his Garbage-Man's name is "Gus Simpson", but this may have been before the character of the Garbage-Man was fully developed, and could refer to someone else.
* The ''[[Scamp]]'' newspaper comic makesmade the odd decision to state the fact that Lady and Tramp never got around to giving Scamp's siblings names. The comic runsran for two months before they decidedecided to address this fact and actually decide to start giving them onesome.
* In ''[[Calvin and Hobbes]]'', the parents names are never revealed nor is the family last name. The full names of Rosalyn, Moe and Miss Wormwood are never told either. Susie Derkins is the only character whose full name is revealed.
** This is part of the reason why Watterson scrapped the Uncle Max character after his first appearance—it was altogether too awkward that Max couldn't refer to his brother by name.
* ''[[The Broons]]''. Only the older kids have names. Their parents are Maw and Paw Broon (and Paw's father is Grandpaw Broon), and their younger siblings are The Twins and The Bairn.
 
== [[Radio]] ==
 
* Ford Prefect is a name picked by the ''[[Hitch Hikers Guide to The Galaxy|Hitchhiker's Guide Toto Thethe Galaxy]]'' researcher due to a misunderstanding about Earth. In the books it's revealed he never learnt to pronounce his own name (his father was the [[Last of His Kind]] following the [[Noodle Incident|Collapsing Hrung Disaster of Betelgeuse VII]] and named his son in the now extinct Praxibetel dialect), and the kids at school called him Ix (meaning "Boy who is unable to explain what a Hrung is, or why it should choose to collapse on Betelgeuse VII").
== Radio ==
 
* Ford Prefect is a name picked by the ''[[Hitch Hikers Guide to The Galaxy|Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy]]'' researcher due to a misunderstanding about Earth. In the books it's revealed he never learnt to pronounce his own name (his father was the [[Last of His Kind]] following the [[Noodle Incident|Collapsing Hrung Disaster of Betelgeuse VII]] and named his son in the now extinct Praxibetel dialect), and the kids at school called him Ix (meaning "Boy who is unable to explain what a Hrung is, or why it should choose to collapse on Betelgeuse VII").
** The misunderstanding was explained more fully in the movie by showing Ford walking out into the middle of a street and attempting to greet a car, [[Mistook the Dominant Lifeform|thinking it was the dominant species on Earth.]] This was a joke that some fans understood without needing the explanation, as Ford Prefects are a kind of car sold in the U.K., Australia, Argentina and Canada. American fans tended not to get the joke, since Ford Prefects were never sold in the U.S.
** Another character attempts to use this trope. When Arthur asks his name, he says "My name is not important." After some cajoling, he gives Arthur his name.
{{quote|'''Arthur:''' Slartibartfast?
'''Slartibartfast:''' I told you it wasn't important. }}
**:* [[Word of God]] is that [[Douglas Adams]] did this as a way of teasing the BBC typist. She was typing out this ridiculous name every time he spoke, and the name never actually occuredoccurred in dialogue in his first episode, so he could just as easily have been "Old Man."
 
 
== Theatre ==
 
== [[Theatre]] ==
* Many characters in [[Plautus]]'s work, including the ''protagonist'' of ''Casina'', whose name is only found in other documents, not in the script.
* Most of the characters in ''[[Into the Woods]]''. With the exception of Cinderella's stepsisters, the only characters who have proper names are the ones who get them in their original fairy tales.
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* In the ''[[Reefer Madness]]'' musical, the man who provides the [[Framing Device]] for the story is never reffered to by name; most just call him "The Lecturer".
* Generally if there's a Narrator in a stage show they won't be given a name [[Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep"|beyond their function]], although they can have other names besides 'Narrator', such as the Stage Manager in ''Our Town'' or the Leading Player in ''Pippin''.
* Not counting adaptations or works inspired by ''[[Macbeth]]'', the Weird Sisters have no names in the original work. In fact, "Weird Sisters" is a title added to later adaptations; Shakespeare's script only calls them "the witches".
 
== [[Video Games]] ==
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* In ''[[I Wanna Be the Guy]]'', we never get to know the main character real name, nor the name of the final boss. That's assuming that The Kid and The Guy aren't their real names. "The Guy" is a title.
* Rookie One from ''[[Star Wars Rebel Assault]]''. In the first game, [[The Faceless|his face is never shown]] either.
* The main character from the ''[[Chocobo's Dungeon]]'' games is only ever referred to as 'Chocobo'.
* In ''[[Yume Nikki]]'', there is no given name or identity for the protagonist. There is debate of the protagonist's gender, for an example of the ambiguity. Later on via checking out the coding, the protagonist's name is Madotsuki. Every other character in the game all have fan-names that are not official - officially, they are nameless characters. The fact there is no dialogue, narration, or footnotes of any kind in this game only enhances the effect.
* ''[[Ōkami|Okami]]'' has a minor character who lives next to Hana Valley whose text boxes say "Nameless Man".
** ''[[Ōkamiden|Okamiden]]'' has a scholar. She claims that she will reveal her name on her date with Kurow. We never see the date because {{spoiler|Kurow died.}}
* In ''[[Nine Hours, Nine Persons, Nine Doors|Nine Hours Nine Persons Nine Doors]]'' you learn the true identities of the other participants of the Nonary Game. Except for {{spoiler|Seven}}.
* In ''[[Harvest Moon]]|Harvest Moon: Friends of Mineral Town (and More Friends)]]'', the Doctor is simply called Doctor. However, in the DS games, he is called Doctor Trent.
** He eventually reveals to you his name, which is Tim. Trent and Tim are technically [[Identical Grandson|grandson and grandfather]]. Most of the Harvest Goddesses plus the first Witch Princess and her niece are nameless.
* In the ''[[Dark Parables]]'' series of PC games, the [[Player Character]] is only ever addressed as "Detective."
* Inverted in ''[[Tom Clancy]]'s H.A.W.X.''; the player character has a callsign, "Shade", which is brought up maybe two times across the campaign. Every other time a character refers to him, [[Full-Name Basis|they refer to him by his full name, David Crenshaw.]]
* All we know about the Knight from ''[[Trigger Knight]]'' is that they're... well, a Knight.
* The player character in ''[[Fallout: New Vegas]]'' has no set name (usually being referred to as "Courier" in dialogue), but is named by the player at the start of the game. Playing this trope straight is The King, de facto ruler of Freeside. The NCR intelligence arm is all over him, and "The King" is the only name he's ever given.
** There are also lesser No Name Given characters, like the Forecaster, most generic townsfolk ("Freeside Resident," "Goodsprings Settler, etc.") and most human mooks ("Fiend," "Legionary Assassin," etc.).
* In ''[[Jak and Daxter The Precursor Legacy]]'' only a handful of characters are known by name. All others are instead referred to by [[Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep"|their profession]] or their relationship to other characters. Examples include the mayor, the sculptor, the fisherman, Jak's uncle, the bird lady, the gambler and the various sages.
* ''[[Dragon Quest Swords|Dragon Quest Swords: The Masked Queen and the Tower of Mirrors]]'' has one character (Fleurette) who will refer to the otherwise unnamed protagonist by a nickname in spoken dialogue; she suggests several nicknames (such as "Blade" and "mon ami"), and you can choose one of them.
* The main character of ''[[Hatred]]'' opens the trailer to his game by saying "My name is not important... What is important is what I'm going to do". Fans joke that his name actually is "Not Important", and an [[Alternate Character Interpretation]] that his rampage is caused by an [[Embarrassing First Name]].
** The alternate interpretation was [[Ascended Meme|referenced in patch notes]] that refereedreferred to the main character as "Notim Portant"
* The protagonist of ''[[A Hat in Time]]'' is simply referred to as "Hat Kid", her name never mentioned in-game. In fact, nobody in-game calls her "Hat Kid" either, referring to her by names like "some girl", "small child" or "little girl". Descriptions of her in the manual provide no help there, as they are given by Hat Kid herself, in first person narrative.
* In ''[[Little Nightmares]]'', the only character with a name is the protagonist, Six (and in the sequel, her friend Mono) everyone else is identified by their occupation, such as the Chefs, the Teacher, the Janitor, and so on. The [[Big Bad]] is simply called The Lady.
* Arceus, the [[The Maker|Creator God]] in ''[[Pokémon]]'' mythos. As it tells the player in ''[[Pokémon Legends: Arceus]]'', "Arceus" is the name humans gave it, and it uses that name while dealing with them. Whatever its real name is (assuming it even has one) it keeps secret.
 
=== [[Visual Novels]] ===
* At one point in ''Kagetsu Tohya'' [[Tsukihime|Kohaku]] shows up for the school festival and doesn't really know what to put for her surname, so she just writes Tohno. She, and Hisui by extension, don't actually ''have'' last names. Or at least, they don't remember their families or childhood. Ciel's last name is also never given and Ciel also happens to be a pseudonym. Her real first name is Elesia, something mentioned only in passing. It's something a bit more important in her case, marking her as someone who doesn't entirely belong.
* From the ''[[Ace Attorney]]'' series,
** The Judge; he's always referred to as "Your Honor" or [[Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep"|The Judge]]. This is even lampshaded in one story where he gives Wright his business card, but the name on it is too small to read.
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* In the [[Murder Mystery]] [[Visual Novel]] ''[[Jisei]]'', the protagonist's name is never mentioned, even though you are able to see his face and body. He is also the only character in the game who is not voiced.
 
== [[Web Comics]] ==
* The Boy from ''[[Scary Go Round]]''.
** The Boy has a name, revealed in a letter addressed to him in the July 18, 2007 strip: {{spoiler|Eustace Boyce}}, which could stand alone as an explanation for his nickname. However, a second explanation was developed in the March 19, 2008 strip with the introduction of Elodie. It still doesn't explain why early on in the strip both The Boy's parents referred to each other as The Father and The Mother.
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* Subverted in ''[[Bob the Angry Flower]]'' - "The Nameless Ones" is indeed a name.
 
== [[Web Original]] ==
 
== Web Original ==
 
* Kate in ''[[Kate Modern]]'' revealed in the fourth episode that her name wasn't really Kate. Her real first name, Genevieve, wasn't revealed until episode 88, "Birthday Surprise", while her surname, Strathcarron, wasn't revealed until episode 163, "Prime Suspect". Several other major characters' surnames have not been revealed, including Charlie, Lauren, Sophie and Terrence, but it is not implied that there is any mystery behind those names.
** There's also the Watcher and the Shadow, whose lack of names befit their status as anonymous Order agents.
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* The title character of ''[[Pittsburgh Dad]]'' hasn't been given a name, though his wife (Deb) and next-door neighbor (Tom) have.
 
== [[Western Animation]] ==
 
== Western Animation ==
 
* On ''[[Ed, Edd 'n' Eddy]]'', Eddy's Brother is never given a name, not even in the movie since all the character's refer to him as "Eddy's Brother". In fact, during the movie the credits even state him as "Eddy's Brother". However, some fans debate that his real name is "Big Jim".
** On top of that, the only two characters with confirmed surnames are the Kanker sisters and Nazz (yes, her last name is given in the movie).
*** In an interview, Antonucci actually revealed Eddy's brother DOES''does'' have a name. {{spoiler|Matthew}}
* In ''[[The Fairly OddParents]]'', Timmy Turner's parents are only ever referred by their relation to Timmy. Sometimes they're called Mr. and Mrs. Turner, but more often they're called "Timmy's parents".
** Gets a bit of a [[Lampshade Hanging]] in the episode "Odd Jobs." Timmy's father addresses Timmy's class for a career day, and introduces himself by saying "my name is Timmy's Dad!"
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* While Shaggy from ''[[Scooby Doo]]'' does have a first name (Norville), you could easily watch a hundred episodes of the franchise's various incarnations without hearing it.
* In ''[[Atomic Betty]]'', Betty's last name is never mentioned; the most we know is it begins with a 'B', though the fandom likes to refer to her as Betty Barrett.
* The title characters of ''[[Two Stupid Dogs|2 Stupid Dogs]]'' are never given names because they are strays, the closing credits dub them "Big Dog" and "Little Dog".
** In one episode, Little Dog has to fill out a form. He leaves "name" blank, and laments, "I don't know my name!"
** Though one episode had the big dog say his name was "Jonathan".
* In an episode of ''[[Animaniacs]]'', Chicken Boo assumes the disguise of "The Man With No Personality." This is a parody of the movie which this trope is based off of.
** Some of the main characters from ''[[Animaniacs]]'' (Mindy's mom) and ''[[Histeria!]]!'' (Froggo and Toast).
* Wallace from ''[[Wallace and Gromit]]'' is never given a last name. Made particularly obvious and funny in ''A Close Shave'':
** Wallace meets the owner of a store he's cleaning the windows of:
{{quote|'''Wendolene''': Ramsbottom. Wendolene Ramsbottom.
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* On ''[[Gargoyles]],'' the titular species traditionally doesn't use names. Humans find this sort of awkward, so every ''important'' gargoyle gets one at some point. The three Coldstone personalities don't get names until their last appearance on the show, though; before that fans [[All There in the Script|and the script]] called them [[Shout-Out|Othello, Desdemona and Iago]].
* Nanny from ''[[Muppet Babies]]''.
* [[Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep"|The Mayor]] from ''[[The Nightmare Before Christmas]]'' (though some of the merch calls him [[Punny Name|Hizzonor]]). Most of the citizens also seem to not have names (The Clown With The-Tear-Away-Face, The Wolf Man, etc).
* Presumably Presto from the ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]'' cartoon wasn't really named that, but it's the only thing he's ever called in the series.
* In ''[[The Small One (Disney)|The Small One]]'' the eponymous donkey is the only character named.
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** His name apparently is shortened from "His Infernal Majesty".
* While it's possible, given his parents' demonstrated parenting skills, that Butt-head, of ''Beavis and Butt-head'' is actually named Butt-head, more likely it's a nickname. He is never given any other name, though.
* The General on ''[[Dastardly and Muttley in Their Flying Machines]]'' has no name, although in the comic adaptation of the episode "Camouflage Hoparoo" (Gold Key, Hanna-Barbera Fun-In #2 as "It's Flop And Go-Go"), he is identified as General Gibberish.
* On ''[[Wacky Races]]'', only Clyde and Ring-A-Ding are identified in the Ant Hill Mob. A Hanna-Barbera publicity drawing has the others identified as Mac, Danny, Rug Bug Benny, Willy and Kirby, none of the names of which are mentioned on the show itself. When the Mob made it to [[The Perils of Penelope Pitstop]] a year later, Ring-A-Ding would be renamed Dum-Dum, and the others would be renamed Pockets, Yak-Yak, Snoozy, Zippy and Softy.
* In ''[[The Care Bears Movie]]'', the evil book has no apparent name.
* In ''[[Rick and Morty]]'', Bird Person's species does not use names; as he himself claimed when he and Rick met, they regard such concepts as "cages". "Culture really [[Cluster F-Bomb| f***ed you up]] on that one, huh?" replies Rick.
{{quote|'''Rick:''' Culture really [[Cluster F-Bomb| f***ed you up]] on that one, huh?
'''Bird Person:''' Affirmative.}}
* In the first season of ''[[Code Lyoko]]'', the principal of Kadic Academy was originally just referred to as "Monsieur" in the original version and "the Principal" or "Sir" in the dub. It wasn't until season two that his last name - Delmas - was revealed, and his first name - Jean-Pierre - wasn't mentioned until season three.
 
== [[Real Life]] ==
* The category 1 hurricane that resulted from the 1991 [[wikipedia:1991 Perfect Storm|"perfect storm"]] <ref>The storm itself was created by the absorption of a another hurricane (named Grace) into a nor'easter.</ref> was never given a proper name. This was done on purpose so there wouldn't be confusion among the media and the public, as most of the damage and attention was from and on the initial nor'easter, while the hurricane's damage was limited to power outages and slick roads (the single death the hurricane cause was due to a traffic accident). The name it likely would have been assigned was Henri.
* ''[[The Onion]]'' applies this to [http://www.theonion.com/articles/nameless-hurricane-that-much-more-terrifying,2273/ a natural disaster].
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* Likewise [[Johnny Cash]], born J. R. Cash. He apparently assumed "Johnny" because the USAF wouldn't accept initials as a valid name.
* The writer Abe Lemons claims to have been born A. E. Lemons, and when it was told he needed a first name, he just put a "B" between the A and the E. Supposedly he later regretted not renaming himself "Ace".
* Also [[Ulysses S. Grant]], who was born Hiram Ulysses Grant and had his name changed as a result of an error when applying to West Point. His friends called him Sam.
** This also made his initials U.S. Grant. Quite useful when leading the Union army and later running for President.
* None of the members of synthrock band [[The Birthday Massacre]] use their real names. For example, there's Chibi on vocals, Rainbow and Falcore on guitar, O. E. on bass, O-en on keyboard, and Rhim on drums.
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** In the band [[Lordi]] only Mr. Lordi's real name is known to the public, and he won't reveal his real face. The rest of the band is entirely anonymous in their civilian identities, and the media has agreed to keep it that way.
* The members of [[The Residents]] have always remained completely anonymous and have always worn masks (most famously the eyeball mask, top hat, and tuxedo outfit) in performance and other media.
* The Tank Man{{who}}
* [[Image Board|Anonymous]], eventually subverted by Project Chanology.
* The Man in the Iron Mask (not that historians haven't tried to figure it out).
* One of the hallmarks of urban legends is the absence of names. For instance, http[https://darwinawards.com/personal/personal2000-39.html this account] on the [[Darwin Awards]] site. An unnamed man at an unnamed company is killed by an unnamed robot. Hmmm.
** At least that one is probably based on the death of Kenji Urada, the first man ever killed by a robot.
* [[Prince]] the Artist Formerly Known as [[The Unpronounceable]] Symbol formerly known as Prince.
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{{reflist}}
[[Category:Naming Conventions]]
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Naming Conventions]]