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2006-09-14 23:30:57 · 13 answers · asked by HezO 1 in Education & Reference Words & Wordplay

13 answers

mis·no·mer (mĭs-nō'mər) pronunciation
n.

1. An error in naming a person or place.
2.
1. Application of a wrong name.
2. A name wrongly or unsuitably applied to a person or an object.

2006-09-14 23:36:33 · answer #1 · answered by bug 2 · 1 1

The most important example of a misnomer is the word "Atheism". A-theism is a negative term simply meaning without-religion. Atheists have nothing to do with God then why the term is applied to them?

Russell has proposed that they should be called "Atomists" but Atom is a Greek term meaning "indivisible" now we know that Atom is divisible, so this is not explanatory either.

Some people use the term "Evolutionist". And in my opinion this is the right term. Evolutionism as opposed to Creationism. Though some Creationists have also incorporated evolution in their doctrines, but that simply doesn't make sense. So we can ignore it.

2006-09-15 02:20:07 · answer #2 · answered by Rustic 4 · 0 1

I think the ones by Crisssy and Naved King really explain this. While the others are what comes up on searches it really does not explain what the meaning is. The ones those 2 users came up with really explain the concept well rather than just giving more meaningless words.

2006-09-14 23:46:06 · answer #3 · answered by adobeprincess 6 · 1 0

Meaning Misnomer

2017-02-21 00:47:37 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

something that is named wrong. For example, calling Hitler, "Uncle Cuddle Fuzzy," would be a misnomer.

2006-09-14 23:33:17 · answer #5 · answered by medellia1984 3 · 1 1

The Mistake Name.

for instance: The USA is described as a "melting pot," the connotation is that things are somehow blended together.

The true purpose of a melting pot is to separate the slag & pure metal/

2006-09-15 00:02:58 · answer #6 · answered by LeBlanc 6 · 0 0

read lemony snickets a series of unfortunate events book three. Especially about uncle Monty and his "increadably deadly viper"

2006-09-15 03:57:43 · answer #7 · answered by April J 4 · 0 0

1. a misapplied or inappropriate name or designation.
2. an error in naming a person or thing.

2006-09-14 23:32:34 · answer #8 · answered by *SugaryLips* 3 · 1 1

Look at the link

2006-09-14 23:38:31 · answer #9 · answered by globetrotter 2 · 1 1

An error in naming a person or place.

Application of a wrong name.
A name wrongly or unsuitably applied to a person or an object.

misnomer
Look up Misnomer 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).

Examples
Animal crackers are not crackers but cookies.
Anti-Semitism is prejudice against Jews, not all Semites.
Arabic numerals originated in India, not in the Arab world.
Asteroids are small planets, not star-like objects as their name suggests.
In baseball, the statistics on base percentage and slugging percentage are not percentages but averages.
Catgut is made from sheep intestines.
Chinese checkers is not Chinese (or even Asian) in origin.
A coconut is not a nut, but a dry fruit.
Crystalware glass, like all glass, is not a crystaline solid but an amorphous one.
One parks on a driveway and drives on a parkway.
Dry cleaning immerses clothes in liquid solvents that are anything but dry.
Fireflies are beetles, not flies, though they do fly.
Fixed income markets no longer deal predominately with fixed (known) payments.
Fullscreen is a term commonly used for home viewing releases (DVD, VHS, etc.) of theatrical films to differentiate from their widescreen counterpart. Yet, due to the rising popularity of 16:9 HDTV sets, it is, for the most part, the widescreen versions that are technically "fullscreen" (depending on their original aspect ratio.) Plus, most fullscreen versions of modern films, are in fact cut, zoomed, and panned versions of the original widescreen, so while the image fills a 4:3 screen, it is not in fact a "full" picture. The more correct term is "Pan and scan".
The fundamental theorem of algebra, though a theorem of algebra, may be proved by various non-algebraic means. This leads to the notion that it is "really" a theorem of analysis (or topology, etc.) and not of algebra. The deeper point that disparate fields of mathematics are connected in non-obvious ways remains valid, but designating the "fundamental theorem of algebra" a misnomer is debatable.
Greenland is mostly arctic and Iceland is mostly tundra.
Guinea pigs are not pigs, nor are they from Guinea.
The Hundred Years' War was actually a series of separate campaigns and battles which continued for 116 years (1337 to 1453).
Kansas City is a city in Missouri. (Kansas City, Kansas is a suburban outgrowth of Kansas City, Missouri on the other side of the state line. Kansas City, KS has become a large city in and of itself. See also Kansas City, Kansas).
Koala bears are marsupials not closely related to the Ursid family of bears.
Laramie, Wyoming is not in Laramie County though there is such a county in Wyoming
The "lead" in pencils is made of graphite and clay, not lead, though lead was originally used for the same purpose.
A College lecturer in the University of Oxford is paid to give tutorials, not lectures (most lectures are in fact given by College tutors).
At Cambridge University, the May ball and May Bumps (boat race) take place in June.
Mustang horses in North America are often referred to as "wild horses" even though they are not, in fact, wild. They are descended from domesticated horses, and are actually feral.
Newfoundland was considered newly found by those who so named it, but had first been inhabited at least 5,000 years before.
Northwestern University is in northeastern Illinois, a midwestern state. Illinois was, however, part of the historical Northwest Territory.
The Oktoberfest beer festival actually begins in September.
Panama hats are from Ecuador, not Panama.
Peanuts are legumes, not nuts.
Podcasting neither relates to just the iPod, nor does the technology involve any casting as the consumers pull audio data onto their audio players.
A radiator doesn't radiate, it works by convection.
Reduplication, a term in linguistics actually stands for duplication (and not fourfold repetition).
Scripting language is often used to describe the properties of some implementation of a programming language, or the original intent of the designer of the language, and not the language itself.
Several sports teams' names are misnomers, including the Detroit Pistons, who actually play in Auburn Hills, not Detroit, the Washington Redskins who play in Landover, Maryland and the Los Angeles Angels who play in Anaheim, California.
Tin foil is almost always made of aluminium, whereas Tin cans made for the storage of food products are made from steel plated in a thin layer of tin.
The tremolo arm on guitars is used to produce vibrato; not tremolo. The correct term is "vibrato arm".

2006-09-14 23:33:40 · answer #10 · answered by crissyll22 4 · 2 0

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