You could pay to have a football stadium named after yourself. You
might be able to have a hospital wing named in your honor. But there's
something money can't buy: having a word coined after your name, so
that you become part of the language. Such words are called eponyms,
from Greek ep- (after) + -onym (name).

Five people (some from real life, others from fiction) in this week's
words achieved that feat, though not intentionally. They all have eponyms
coined from their names.


Garrison finish (GAR-i-suhn FIN-ish) noun

   The finish of a contest in which the winner rallies at the last
   moment to score the victory.

[After Edward "Snapper" Garrison (1868-1930), a jockey known for hanging
back during most of the race and finishing at top speed to achieve a
thrilling victory.]

-Anu Garg (garg wordsmith.org)

  "Bill said bravely, 'I think we're going to see a real garrison finish.
   It's the pattern of every classic game -- go ahead, fall behind, come
   storming back.'"
   John Helyar; Last Day at Fenway Park; Yankee (Dublin, New Hampshire);
   Apr 2005;

This newsletter is made possible in part by these sponsors:

Subscribe to http://delanceyplace.com -- a carefully selected non-fiction book
excerpt free to your email each day. It's the thinking person's daily quote.

Always find the right word with the Visual Thesaurus. Wordsmith readers
save 10%. Try it free! http://www.visualthesaurus.com/?code=qv9&ad=aw

............................................................................
I believe I found the missing link between animal and civilized man. It is
us. -Konrad Lorenz, ethologist, Nobel laureate (1903-1989)

Discuss this week's words on our bulletin board: http://wordsmith.org/board

Remove, change address, gift subs: http://wordsmith.org/awad/subscriber.html

Pronunciation:
http://wordsmith.org/words/garrison_finish.wav
http://wordsmith.org/words/garrison_finish.ram

Permalink: http://wordsmith.org/words/garrison_finish.html

This message was sent to "[email protected]".

Reply via email to