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)

  1. (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.
  2. (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).
  3. (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.