new name

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English[edit]

Verb[edit]

new name (third-person singular simple present new names, present participle new naming, simple past and past participle new named)

  1. Alternative form of newname

Noun[edit]

new name (plural new names)

  1. Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see new,‎ name.
    • 1725, The New-England Courant:
      It seems that she loaded at Santa Cruz, in Barbary, with Wax, Copper, fine Matts, &c with which she sailed for Marseilles, but the Night after they put to sea, the Crew rose, killed the Capt. Super-Cargo, Mate, Surgeon, &c. and then new named the Ship, calling her the Revenge.
    • 1821, William Shakespeare (commentary by Edmond Malone), Poems and Plays - Volume 3, page 230:
      The King and the Subject, June 5, 1638. Acted by the same company. This title, Sir Henry Herbert says, was changed. I suspect it was new named The Tyrant. The play is lost.
    • 2012, Robert Southey, History of Brazil, page 347:
      When Zarate left the Plata he thought himself entitled to new name that river, and ordered that it should from thenceforth be called Vizcaya, the Biscay, he himself being a Biscayan.