Eponyms
The term Jacky Howe is an Australianism,
and it means 'a sleeveless singlet, worn especially by shearers, rural
workers, etc.'
It is also an example of an eponym.
An eponym is a person whose name has given rise to the name of a people,
place, etc., or a personal name which is used as a common noun. This person
may be living or dead, a fictional character, or a hero, etc. The term
is also used to describe the word so derived.
The word eponym is from Greek eponumos
which means 'given as a name; giving one's name to a thing or person'.
John (Jacky) Robert Howe (1855/61-1920/22) was a champion Queensland
shearer of the 1890s. His tally of 327 merinos shorn in eight hours at
Alice Downs in 1892, still stands as a world record.
Thus John (Jacky) Howe is the personal name or eponym from which the
term Jacky Howe (= sleeveless singlet) is derived. The derived term is
also an eponym.
Some other well known eponyms (of which there are about 35,000 in the
English language) include:
* banksia - an evergreen flowering shrub
named after the English botanist Joseph Banks.
* sandwich - the type of food named after
an English aristocrat, the 4th Earl of Sandwich, said to have eaten food
in this form so as not to leave the gambling table.
* Hercules - a man of exceptional strength
or size named after the legendary Greek hero Heracles (Hercules is the
Latin form), noted for his great strength.
The following are eponyms:
- Adonis
- Alzheimer's (disease)
- Bloody Mary
- bowdlerise
- bowler
- boycott
- cardigan
- Cazaly
- diesel
- Don Juan
- Dorothy Dixer
- Elizabethan
- gardenia
- Gregory's
- hoover
- jacuzzi
- loganberry
- logie
- mackintosh
- Melba
- Ned Kelly
- ocker
- pavlova
- stetson
Look up these terms in the Australian National
Dictionary, The Australian Pocket Oxford
Dictionary, The Australian Concise
Oxford Dictionary, or any other reference, and find the origin
of these eponymous words.
Using the same sources, find some other examples of eponyms.
Eponyms are being created continually in
politics, sport, technology, science, the arts, and the media. They can
reflect the culture of society,particularly in the way they show what is
valued or derided.
Perhaps you can invent some eponyms (with
explanations) which relate to your home or school environment. Remember
that persons can either give their name or have it attached by others to
an event, activity, mannerism,behaviour, etc.
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