eponym

noun
/ˈɛpənɪm/

Etymology

From Latin eponymus, from Ancient Greek ἐπώνῠμος (epṓnŭmos), from ἐπί (epí, “upon, epi-”) + ὄνυμα (ónuma, “name”) + -ος (-os, suffix forming adjectives and nouns). Equivalent to epi- + -nym.

  1. derived from ἐπώνῠμος
  2. derived from eponymus

Definitions

  1. A person who gave or supposedly gave their name to a people, place, institution, etc.

    • The Greeks and Romans tended to credit nearly every location and ethnicity to a legendary eponym, Hellas to Hellen, Rome to Romulus, Egypt to Aegyptus, etc.
    • Similar to the Greek eponymous archons and Roman consuls, the names of the annually appointed Assyrian limus were used for their years in office and they are accordingly also known as eponyms.
  2. Something that is named after a person.

  3. A name taken from a person, a namesake toponym, term, etc.

    • Alexandria is an eponym, taken from its founder Alexander the Great.
    • [Mesmer] lives on today as the root of the eponym mesmerize.
    • For their dubious contribution to literature, Doctor Bowdler and Henrietta were recognized with the eponym bowdlerize[.]
  4. + 3 more definitions
    1. A name or term derived from any proper noun, inclusive of places, brands, etc.

      • "Tangerine" is an eponym in reference to Tangier... The unflattering eponym "shanghai" derived from the behavior of American shippers, not the Chinese themselves...
    2. Synonym of epitome, a person taken as a symbol or quintessential representative of some…

      Synonym of epitome, a person taken as a symbol or quintessential representative of some trait, school, etc.

      • Rockefeller became the very eponym of wealth.
    3. Synonym of epithet, a distinguishing title.

      • It was only posthumously that Julian was distinguished with the eponym "Apostate".

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for eponym. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA