Names of people that became words

There are words which have been actually derived from names of different people. A lot of people do not know them. So let us discuss them.

Here is one: ASSASSIN

It is derived from Arabic word ‘Hashasheen’. They were a group of people who were today’s suicide bombers/ killers. Their members used to go and kill prominent leaders and personalities whom they considered enemies. The murderer would be executed but he used to be a common guy, and would have succeeded in killing a much more important personality. In fact, Hazrat Ali was murdered by a similar suicidal killer. He was executed after Ali’s death but his killing obviously did not mean much as compared to Ali’s.

I will try to find some more about them because I remember that they belonged to the group which is now called Agha Khani.

Btw, I read that they were called Hasheesheen because it was thought they used to go to suicide missions after being drugged by Hasheesh. This however, is not true.


Anyone knows some other words?

Re: Names of people that became words

interesting, indeed! :slight_smile:

here is what i found by googling:

begonia — “Any of various tropical or subtropical plants of the genus Begonia, widely cultivated as ornamentals for their usually asymmetrical, brightly colored leaves.” After Michel Bégon (1638-1710), former governor of the French colony of Haiti and patron of botany.

bloomers — “A costume formerly worn by women and girls that was composed of loose trousers gathered about the ankles and worn under a short skirt.” After Amelia Bloomer, a women’s rights advocate who popularized the style in the early 1850s.

bowdlerize — “To remove material that is considered offensive or objectionable from (a book, for example).” After Thomas Bowdler (1754-1825) who published an expurgated edition of Shakespeare in 1818, leaving out things like Ophelia’s suicide (it was an accidental drowning, of course), and sanitizing Lady Macbeth’s “Out, damned spot!” into to “Out, crimson spot!”

boycott — “To abstain from or act together in abstaining from using, buying, or dealing with as an expression of protest or disfavor or as a means of coercion.” After Captain Charles Boycott, a former British soldier serving as the estate agent for an absentee landlord, the Earl of Erne, in County Mayo, Ireland. During the Irish “Land War,” when Boycott refused his tenants’ demands for a 25% reduction in rates and began evicting them, politician Charles Parnell and the Irish Land League began to ostracize him and his family, depriving them of service in stores, mail delivery, and other necessities.

cardigan — “A knitted garment, such as a sweater or jacket, that opens down the full length of the front.” After the Seventh Earl of Cardigan, James Thomas Brudenell (1797-1868), a British cavalry officer who led the charge of the Light Brigade at Balaklava during the Crimean War, supposedly while wearing his signature knitted wool wasitcoat.
**
chauvinism** — “1. Militant devotion to and glorification of one’s country; fanatical patriotism. 2. Prejudiced belief in the superiority of one’s own gender, group, or kind.” After legendary French soldier Nicolas Chauvin, who served in Napleon’s army and is credited with stupendously patriotic acts, including getting himself wounded 17 times. Supposedly, Napoleon himself presented the soldier with a Sabre of Honor.
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dahlia** — “Any of several plants of the genus Dahlia native to the mountains of Mexico, Central America, and Colombia, having tuberous roots and showy, rayed, variously colored flower heads.” After Anders Dahl, an obscure Swedish botanist, whose name was given to the flower after his death by Abbe Antonio Jose Cavanilles, Director of the Royal Gardens of Madrid.
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decibel** — “A unit used to express relative difference in power or intensity, usually between two acoustic or electric signals, equal to ten times the common logarithm of the ratio of the two levels.” After Alexander Graham Bell — that is, a decibel is one tenth of a bel, the uncommonly-used unit of measurement named after the inventor of the telephone.
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fuschia** – “A dark purplish-red color.” After Leonhart Fuchs (1501-1566), the German scientist frequently cited as one of the founding fathers of botany. No stories of German scientists wearing pink here — it was the plant that was named for him; the word wasn’t used to describe color until 1892.
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guppy** — “A small, brightly colored live-bearing freshwater fish (Poecilia reticulata or Lebistes reticulatus), native to northern South America and adjacent islands of the West Indies and popular in home aquariums.” After R.J. Lechmere Guppy (1836-1916), the Trinidadian clergyman who supplied the first specimens of the fish to the British Museum.

http://flavorwire.files.wordpress.com/2013/02/marquise.jpg?w=480&h=596

The Marquise de Pompadour. Portrait by François Boucher

jackanapes — “A conceited or impudent person.” After William de la Pole, Fourth Earl and First Duke of Suffolk (1396-1450), whose nickname was “Jacknapes,” derived from “Jack of Naples,” a slang term for a monkey. Yes, mocking the nouveau riche goes back to the 1300s.
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leotard** — “A snugly fitting, stretchable one-piece garment with or without sleeves that covers the torso, worn especially by dancers, gymnasts, acrobats, and those engaging in exercise workouts.” After Jules Léotard (1830-1870), the French aerialist who created the style.
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masochism** — “The deriving of sexual gratification, or the tendency to derive sexual gratification, from being physically or emotionally abused.” After Leopold von Sacher-Masoch (1836-1895), the Austrian author of Venus in Furs, which has quite a bit of the stuff in there.
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maverick** — “1. An unbranded range animal, especially a calf that has become separated from its mother, traditionally considered the property of the first person who brands it. 2. One that refuses to abide by the dictates of or resists adherence to a group; a dissenter.” After Samuel Augustus Maverick (1803–1870), a Texas lawyer and cattleman famous for refusing to brand his cattle.
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pompadour** — “A woman’s hairstyle formed by sweeping the hair straight up from the forehead into a high, turned-back roll.” After Jeanne Antoinette Poisson, the Marquise de Pompadour, who was the official mistress of King Louis XV from 1745 until her death, rocked this hairstyle, and was accused of causing the Seven Years’ War.
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saxophone** — “A woodwind instrument with a single-reed mouthpiece and a usually curved conical metal tube, including soprano, alto, tenor, and baritone sizes.” After Belgian instrument designer and musician Adolphe Sax, who invented the instrument in 1846.
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sandwich** — “Two or more slices of bread with a filling such as meat or cheese placed between them.” After John Montagu, the 4th Earl of Sandwich credited with inventing the popular lunch item. As the story goes, the Earl was so busy at the card table that he didn’t have time to eat, and would ask his servants to bring him his meat and cheese stuck between two pieces of bread. When asked what they wanted, his friends would say, “the same as Sandwich!” And thus the sandwich was named.
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sideburns** — “Growths of hair down the sides of a man’s face in front of the ears, especially when worn with the rest of the beard shaved off.” After American Civil War general Ambrose Burnside, who had some super gnarly facial hair. “Burnside” became “sideburns” somehow, and the rest is history.
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silhouette** — “A drawing consisting of the outline of something, especially a human profile, filled in with a solid color.” After Étienne de Silhouette (1709-1767), a French finance minister who imposed strict economic restrictions on the rich during the Seven Years War. His name came to refer to anything done inexpensively, and particularly to the black outline portraits, the very cheapest way to capture your likeness.
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wellington boots** — “Knee-length or calf-length rubber or rubberized boots, worn esp in wet conditions Often shortened to wellies.” After Arthur Wellesley the 1st Duke of Wellington, who “invented” the shoe when he asked his shoemaker to whip him up a modification of the 18th-century Hessian boot, something able to withstand battle as well as being comfortable to lounge about in in the evening.

Re: Names of people that became words

Oops. Wrong section.
mods, please move the thread to culture and linguistics section.

Re: Names of people that became words


lol...Khayaal der aayad, durust aayad...

...i had noticed that but forgot to mention it in my post...
...i thought you had a nazam about English words lol

Re: Names of people that became words

In the list you mentioned:

BOYCOTT: wow. Didn't know it was a person's name. But then I realized we cricket fans already know Geoffrey Boycott.
GUPPY: I thought Guppy is the one who is a member of gupshup forum! :)

Re: Names of people that became words

lolz…exactly! Guppy is also a heavy lifter / bulky transporter aircraft. i wonder if it was designed by someone named Guppy!


Restored attachments:

Re: Names of people that became words

Here is another word I know:

SLAVE:
It comes from the name of SLAV people. I think during Roman times, most slaves used to come from Slavic people. So for Romans, Slav people became equivalent to the concept of slaves.

So who are Slav people? Slav people are Russians, Ukrainians, Belarusians, Serbians, Croatians, Bosnians, and I think Greek are Slav too (someone may confirm it).

The derivation of the word slave encapsulates a bit of European history and explains why the two words slaves and Slavs are so similar; they are, in fact, historically identical.

Slavs became slaves around the beginning of the ninth century when the Holy Roman Empire tried to stabilize a German-Slav frontier.

Dyson

Re: Names of people that became words


yes, from old Yugoslavia! :)

Re: Names of people that became words

The company?

Re: Names of people that became words

Regarding the word ASSASSIN, wiki-ustaad says that the original word was HASHASHIN, not Hasheesheen.

To learn more about them, read this:

Assassins - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Re: Names of people that became words

Assassin was related to Hashashen who were used by Hassan Bin Sabah (Ismaili Leader) who made a fake paradise on earth. A complete account of this can be found in Abdul Haleem Sharar’s novel Firdous e Bareen which has been published in English by Oxford Universty Press.

Firdous e Bareen - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Re: Names of people that became words

Barbarism is thought to be originated from Berbers of North Africa, who are referred extensively while discussing Muslim Spain’s history. The word is, however, got more ancient roots.

Barbarian - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Berber (name) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Greek term “βάρβαρος / βάρβαροι” was originally a derogatory term for all non-Greek speakers. The nonsense syllables “bar-bar” have no meaning in Greek; the term implied that all languages other than Greek were a collection of nonsense syllables. The term has been variously translated as “stutterers,” “stammerers,” or “babblers.” But the term did include, from the beginning, a connotation of being non-civilized or “barbaric” that later became primary in cognate terms like “barbarian.”

Contrary to ancient sources, the Amazigh/Imazighen (the Berber people) were not called barbarians[SUP][1]](Names of the Berber people - Wikipedia)[/SUP] by the Greeks and Romans. The Berbers were known as Libyans (Λίβυες or Λίβυοι) or Mazyes[SUP][2]](Names of the Berber people - Wikipedia)[/SUP] (Μάζυες or Μάξυες; Mazaces in Latin) to the ancient Greeks derived from Mazigh the ancestor of the Berbers. They were known under many other names to the Romans as Numidians, Mauri and Moors. The Egyptians called their western neighbors the Meshwesh and Libu.

Because the Berbers were called Al-Barbar by the Arabs, the modern European languages and other ones adopted it from the Arabic language. The Arabs probably did not use the name Al-Barbar mainly as a derogatory name. The ancient Arab-Muslim historians were not aware of the origin of that name, they cited some myths or stories about the name. The most notorious myth considers an eponymous Barbar as the ancestor of the Berbers. According to that myth, “the Berbers were the descendants of Barbar, the son of Tamalla, the son of Mazigh, the son of Canaan, the son of Ham, the son of Noah” (Ibn Khaldun, The History of Ibn Khaldun, Chapter 3). Another people called Berbers by medieval Arab and ancient Greek geographers, respectively, were the ancestors of the Somalis. Barbara, an ancient region on the northern coast of Somalia was referred to as Bilad al-Barbar (Land of the Berbers).[SUP][3]](Names of the Berber people - Wikipedia)[/SUP][SUP][4]](Names of the Berber people - Wikipedia)[/SUP][SUP][5]](Names of the Berber people - Wikipedia)[/SUP]

The fact that the name Berber is a strange name to the Berbers led to confusion. Some sources claim that the Berbers are several ethnic groups who are not related to each other. That is not accurate, because the Berbers refer to themselves as Imazighen singular: Amazigh, throughout all of North Africa from Canary Islands to Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Libya including the Egyptian oasis of Siwa and about half of the Sahara Desert. In addition, genetic studies suggest a strong genetic bond between all the inhabitants of modern-day North Africa west of the Nile river.

The origins of both the names Berber and Amazigh is ambiguous. The oldest cited reference to “Amazigh” goes back to the neighboring ancient Egyptians when they mentioned an ancient Libyan tribe called Meshwesh. Those Meshwesh are supposed by some scholars to be the same ancient Libyan tribe that was mentioned as Maxyans by the Greek historian Herodotus.

Re: Names of people that became words

Zlatan

Re: Names of people that became words

Is this some brand of medicine?

Re: Names of people that became words

Draconian from Draco who wrote first law in Athens.

Re: Names of people that became words

McCarthyism after McCarthy, an American Law Maker. :)

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Freudian slip........ expression derived from the name of Sigmund Feud

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Algorithm **: Musa **Al-Khwarzimi was Persian mathematician. **Algoritmi **is Latin form of his name, which later became Algorithm...

Re: Names of people that became words

The word 'Algebra' also derived from Al-Khwarzmi's book ' Al-Jabr wal Muqabla'.

In March 2008 it was announced that all new directories of education institutions for health care professionals worldwide would now be called Avicenna Directories (in honour of Muslim scientist Ibn e Sina).