The noun eponym is a word for the person after whom a discovery, invention, or place is named; or the name or noun formed in such a way.
Some examples include Lou Gehrig's disease, Halley's comet, Megan's Law, sandwich, pasteurization, and America.
well some means like i have some apples or i have some clothes SOME means you have alittle of something
some includes
Some words ending in SOME are:awesomegruesomehandsomelonesomenoisomequarrelsometiresomewinsome
Some synonyms for the word "misbehaved" is naughty and mischievous.
The word "some" can be an adjective (some items, some people). It can be used as a pronoun, and more rarely as an adverb describing an adjective.
No, I do not need eponyms. Eponyms are not necessary for me to operate or provide information.
Words named after people.
Leonard Zusne has written: 'Eponyms in psychology' -- subject(s): Biography, Dictionaries, Eponyms, Psychology
The six subcategories of Eponyms are People, time period, scientific theory, disease, race, state/city
Eponyms
Entities Eponym....eponyms (plural)
The answer is decibel.
Eponyms.
eponym
An eponym is a word or name derived from the name of a person. HOMBURG is derived from Alexander (1769--1859) and Wilhelm von Humboldt (1767--1835), which are eponyms.
Frank Paulikat has written: 'Eigennamen in Pressetexten' -- subject(s): Eponyms, French Names, French language, French newspapers, Style
An eponym is a word or name derived from the name of a person. HOMBURG is derived from Alexander (1769--1859) and Wilhelm von Humboldt (1767--1835), which are eponyms.