It can be.The name Frank is a noun.The word frank is an adjective meaning earnest, sincere, or open. It is a colloquial noun for a frankfurter (weiner), and a verb meaning to issue or convey without charge.
Floyd is a variant of the name Lloyd, which is derived from the Welsh word llwyd meaning "grey."
Manfred Clynes is the first writer to use the word cyborgs to explain the hybridization of man and machine. Fifty years have passed since the term was coined and entered into the vernacular.
Leonardo da Vinci invented the first robot.
Yes, that is a noun phrase, any word or group of words based on a noun or pronoun that can function in a sentence as a subject, object or prepositional object; it can be one word or many words. Your noun phrase is based on the proper noun 'Frank Martin' and can serve as the subject or the object of a sentence.
Frank Lloyd Wright.
it was coined in 1382
Neologism
No one coined that term, yet. It is not a word.
Italian painter who coined the word automobile
I believe it was coined in 1833 by Scottish geologist Charles Lyell.
Democritus
Eratosthenes
Pythagoras
The word "sarcasm" is believed to have been coined in 1382. It originates from the Greek word "sarkasmos," which means a tearing of the flesh or a bitter sneer.
w.johannsen in 1909
16th century