Biros, bics, and other words named after people
What’s in a name?
We all know that the wellies we might wear to go on walks through muddy fields are named after the first Duke of Wellington, the “Iron Duke”. Perhaps less well known is the link between the mac ��� in British English, at any rate ��� that we might also wear and its inventor, the deviser of the waterproof cloth from which macs are made, Charles Macintosh (1766���1843), the Scottish inventor who patented the cloth. Many units of scientific measurement, both everyday and more specialized, are named after their discoverers: the Italian physicist Count Alessandro Volta gave us volts, the Scottish engineer James Watt gave us, er, ��� watts, and the British Lord Kelvin gave his name to the units in which absolute temperature is measured.
Such words, derived from someone���s name, are technically called eponyms, a word created in the 19th century from the Greek ep��numos “given as a name, giving one’s name to someone or something”, from epi “upon” + onoma “name” (�����������������; ������� + �����������, Aeolic ����������� name). The same Greek word for ���name��� has given English also anonymous and synonym(ous). And when people refer to the eponymous hero of such and such a novel, e.g. Fielding’s��Tom Jones, they mean that the title of the novel is its protagonist’s name.
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biro ��� the Hungarian inventor L��szl�� J��zsef B��r�� wanted to develop a pen with ink that dried quicker than that from a fountain pen, and, after earlier experiments, in 1938 patented his idea for what is known in British English as a biro (elsewhere ballpoint pen is the standard).
As a Jew, he was forced to flee Hungary after the Nazi occupation, and went to Argentina, where a biro is still known, in honour of him, as a birome. Elsewhere in the Spanish-speaking world it is known as un bol��grafo, because of the ball (bola) that controls the flow of ink (bol��grafo is also shortened to boli). Marcel Bich bought the patent from B��r����for production in France for the company which became BIC, and that is the name that biros are known by in French���in other words, they are also a French eponym.
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