misnomer
/ˌmɪsˈnoʊməɹ/
UK: /(ˌ)mɪsˈnəʊmə/
misnomer
English
Noun
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Definition
A mistake in the naming of a person or place; a misidentification.
Etymology
The noun is derived from Late Middle English misnoumer (“(law) mistaken identification of a person; plea based on such misidentification”), from Anglo-Norman mesnomer, a noun use of Anglo-Norman mesnomer, mesnommer, and Old French mesnomer, mesnommer (“to name incorrectly”), from mes- (prefix meaning ‘badly, wrongly’) + nomer, nommer (“to name”) (from Latin nōmināre, the present active infinitive of nōminō (“to name”), from nōmen (“name”) (from Proto-Indo-European *h₁nómn̥ (“name”)) + -ō (suffix forming regular first-conjugation verbs)). The verb is derived from the noun.
Example Sentences
- "Rewilding[…]is also a misnomer, for whether by getting rid of tens of thousands of sheep in Patagonia or introducing a living species as a surrogate for an extinct one – Sayaguesa cattle in place of aurochs in Croatia’s Velebit Mountains, for instance – rewilding requires more human intervention than its name suggests."
- "[…] plaintiff's misstyling himself as corporation in initial complaint constituted case of misnomer."
- "The name Chinese checkers is a misnomer since the game has nothing to do with China."
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