Output

Attention: The Name Parser stage is deprecated and may not be supported in future releases. Use Open Name Parser for parsing names.
Table 1. Name Parser Output

Field Name

Format

Description / Valid Values

AccountDescription

String

An account description that is part of the name. For example, in "Mary Jones Account # 12345", the account description is "Account#12345".

EntityType

String

Indicates the type of name. One of the following:

Firm
The name is a company name.
Personal
The name is an individual person's name.

Fields Related to Names of Companies

FirmModifier.1.Object

String

The first object of a preposition occurring in firm name. For example, in the firm name "Pratt & Whitney Division of United Technologies", the first object of a preposition is "United Technologies".

FirmModifier.1.Preposition

String

The first preposition occurring in firm name. For example, in the firm name "Pratt & Whitney Division of United Technologies", "of" would be the first preposition.

FirmModifier.2.Object

String

The second object of a preposition occurring in firm name. For example, in the firm name "Church of Our Lady of Lourdes", the second object of a preposition is the second "Lourdes".

FirmModifier.2.Preposition

String

The second preposition occurring in firm name. For example, in the firm name "Church of Our Lady of Lourdes", the second preposition is the second "of".

FirmName

String

The name of a company. For example, "Precisely Software, Inc."

FirmPrimary

String

The base part of a company's name. For example, "Precisely Software".

FirmSuffix

String

The corporate suffix. For example, "Co." and "Inc."

Fields Related to Names of Individual People

FirstName

String

The first name of a person.

FirstNameVariantGroup

String

A numeric ID that indicates the group of similar names to which first name belongs. For example, Muhammad, Mohammed, and Mehmet all belong to the same Name Variant Group. The actual group ID is assigned when the add-on data is loaded.

This field is only populated if you have purchased the Name Variant Group feature.

GenderCode

String

A person's gender as determined by analyzing the first name. One of the following:

A
Ambiguous. The name is both a male and a female name. For example, Pat.
F
Female. The name is a female name.
M
Male. The name is a male name.
U
Unknown. The name could not be found in the gender table.

GenderDeterminationSource

String

The culture used to determine a name's gender. If the name could not be found in the gender table, this field is blank.

GeneralSuffix

String

A person's general/professional suffix. For example, MD or PhD.

LastName

String

The last name of a person.

MaturitySuffix

String

A person's maturity/generational suffix. For example, Jr. or Sr.

MiddleName

String

The middle name of a person.

NameScore

String

Score representing quality of the parsing operation, from 0 to 100. 0 indicates poor quality and 100 indicates high quality.

ParserRecordID

String

A unique ID assigned to each input record.

TitleOfRespect

String

A person's title, such as Mr., Mrs., Dr., or Rev.

Fields Related to Conjoined Names

PersonalName.2.FirstName

String

The first name of the second person in a conjoined name. An example of a conjoined name is "John and Jane Smith."

PersonalName.2.FirstNameVariantGroup

String

A numeric ID that indicates the group of similar names to which first name of the second person in a conjoined name belongs. For example, Muhammad, Mohammed, and Mehmet all belong to the same Name Variant Group. The actual group ID is assigned when the add-on data is loaded.

This field is only populated if you have purchased the Name Variant Group feature.

PersonalName.2.GenderCode

String

The gender of the second person in a conjoined name as determined by Name Parser analyzing the first name. An example of a conjoined name is "John and Jane Smith." One of the following:

A
Ambiguous. The name is both a male and a female name. For example, Pat.
F
Female. The name is a female name.
M
Male. The name is a male name.
U
Unknown. The name could not be found in the gender table.

PersonalName.2.GenderDeterminationSource

String

The culture used to determine the gender of the second person in a conjoined name. An example of a conjoined name is "John and Jane Smith."

PersonalName.2.GeneralSuffix

String

The general/professional suffix of the second person in a conjoined name. An example of a conjoined name is "John and Jane Smith." Examples of general suffixes are MD and PhD.

PersonalName.2.LastName

String

The last name of the second person in a conjoined name. An example of a conjoined name is "John and Jane Smith."

PersonalName.2.MaturitySuffix

String

The maturity/generational suffix of the second person in a conjoined name. An example of a conjoined name is "John and Jane Smith." Examples of maturity suffixes are Jr. and Sr.

PersonalName.2.MiddleName

String

The middle name of the second person in a conjoined name. An example of a conjoined name is "John and Jane Smith."

PersonalName.2.TitleOfRespect

String

The title of respect for the second name in a conjoined name. For example, "Mr. and Mrs. Smith" is a conjoined name. Examples of titles of respect are Mr., Mrs., and Dr.

PersonalName.3.FirstName

String

The first name of the third person in a conjoined name. For example, "Mr. & Mrs. John Smith & Dr. Mary Jones" is a conjoined name.

PersonalName.3.FirstNameVariantGroup

String

A numeric ID that indicates the group of similar names to which first name of the second person in a conjoined name belongs. For example, Muhammad, Mohammed, and Mehmet all belong to the same Name Variant Group. The actual group ID is assigned when the add-on data is loaded.

This field is only populated if you have purchased the Name Variant Group feature.

PersonalName.3.GenderCode

String

The gender of the third person in a conjoined name as determined by Name Parser analyzing the first name. An example of a conjoined name is "Mr. & Mrs. John Smith & Adam Jones". One of the following:

A
Ambiguous. The name is both a male and a female name. For example, Pat.
F
Female. The name is a female name.
M
Male. The name is a male name.
U
Unknown. The name could not be found in the gender table.

PersonalName.3.GenderDeterminationSource

String

The culture used to determine the gender of the third person in a conjoined name. "Mr. & Mrs. John Smith & Adam Jones".

PersonalName.3.GeneralSuffix

String

The general/professional suffix of the third person in a conjoined name. An example of a conjoined name is "Mr. & Mrs. John Smith & Adam Jones PhD." Examples of general suffixes are MD and PhD.

PersonalName.3.LastName

String

The last name for the third person in a conjoined name. For example, "Mr. & Mrs. John Smith & Dr. Mary Jones" is a conjoined name.

PersonalName.3.MaturitySuffix

String

The maturity/generational suffix of the third person in a conjoined name. An example of a conjoined name is "Mr. & Mrs. John Smith & Adam Jones Sr." Examples of maturity suffixes are Jr. and Sr.

PersonalName.3.MiddleName

String

The middle name for the third person in a conjoined name. For example, "Mr. & Mrs. John Smith & Dr. Mary Jones" is a conjoined name.

PersonalName.3.TitleOfRespect

String

The title of respect for the third name in a conjoined name. For example, "Mr. & Mrs. John Smith & Dr. Mary Jones" is a conjoined name. Examples of titles of respect are Mr., Mrs., and Dr.