give name to
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English
[edit]Verb
[edit]give name to (third-person singular simple present gives name to, present participle giving name to, simple past gave name to, past participle given name to)
- (transitive) To express (something) in words; to identify by name.
- 1644, John Barwick, Certain Disquisitions and Considerations[1], Oxford, page 27:
- […] who may proceed against such Malignants where the Laws are wholy silent, and neither have given name to their fault, nor prescribed any punishment?
- 1711, letter signed ‘T.’ in Joseph Addison and Richard Steele (eds.), The Spectator, No. 145, 16 August, 1711, in The Works of Joseph Addison, New York: Harper, 1850, Volume 1, p. 218,[2]
- The skirt of your [men’s] fashionable coats forms as large a circumference as our [women’s] petticoats; as these are set out with whalebone, so are those with wire, to increase and sustain the bunch of fold that hangs down on each side; and the hat, I perceive is decreased in just proportion to the head-dresses. We [women] make a regular figure, but I defy your mathematics to give name to the form you [men] appear in.
- 1977, Audre Lorde, “Poetry Is Not a Luxury” in Sister Outsider, Trumansburg, NY: Crossing Press, 1984, p. 36,
- […] it is through poetry that we give name to those ideas which are—until the poem—nameless and formless, about to be birthed, but already felt.
- (transitive) To lend one's or its name to (something); to be the source of the name of (something).
- 1764, Oliver Goldsmith, An History of England[3], London: J. Newbery, Volume 1, Letter 23, p. 174:
- The ensign of the Duke [of York] was a white rose, that of Henry a red. This gave name to the two houses, whose contentions were now about to drench the kingdom with slaughter.
- 1817, Walter Scott, Rob Roy, London: Ward, Lock, Introduction, p. xii,[4]
- the author must now offer some notices of the individual who gives name to these volumes
- 1999, Marc Peter Keane, “Gardens”, in David Scott, editor, Simply Zen[5], London: New Holland, page 88:
- The new leaders moved their capital to Kamakura, an isolated town near present-day Tokyo, giving name to the era, the Kamakura period (1185-1333).
- (transitive, obsolete) To give a name to (a person or animal).
- Synonym: name
- 1568, The Bishops’ Bible, London, Table setting out the genealogy of Adam,[6]
- And Adam gaue name to the woman, which was made of his ribbe (while he was a sleepe) and called her EVA, as he gaue name to al other creatures.