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Misnomer

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For a list of words that are misnomers, see the English misnomers category of words in Wiktionary, the free dictionary

A misnomer is the wrong name or term for something; a misleading name, often idiomatic.

Some sources of misnomers include

  • A word used in ignorance of the true meaning.
  • An older name being retained as the thing named evolved (e.g., pencil lead, tin can, fixed income markets, mince meat pie, steamroller). This is essentially a metaphorical extension with the older item standing for anything filling its role.
  • A name being based on a similarity in a particular aspect (e.g. asteroids look like stars from Earth, the settled portions of Greenland are greener than the rest)
  • A difference between popular and technical meanings of a term. For example a koala "bear" looks and acts much like bears, but from a zoologist's point of view they are quite distinct. Similarly, fireflies fly, ladybugs look and act like bugs and peanuts look and taste like nuts. The technical sense is often cited as the "correct" sense, but this is a matter of context.
  • An older name being retained even in the face of newer information (e.g., Chinese checkers, Arabic numerals).
  • Ambiguity (e.g., a parkway is generally a road with park-like landscaping, not a place to park).

[edit] Examples

[edit] Triple misnomers

The most famous triple misnomer was observed by Voltaire, who said that the Holy Roman Empire was neither holy, nor Roman, nor an empire. Others include the Federal Reserve Bank, which many people feel is not federalist, not a reserve, and not a bank. Some have said that SQL, a database protocol which stands for Structured Query Language, is not structured, is not only for queries, and is not, technically, a language.

[edit] See also

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