Naming in a sentence as a noun

Thus, you see a reason to honor Lebesgue by naming measure constructed by him with his name.

The naming of _why at the end wasn't really necessary, but it didn't feel too out of place either.

It is Debian's run-parts that imposes the naming restriction.

There are two hard problems in computer science: cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-one errors.

Yes, the naming is unfortunate, though frankly I don't feel sorry for Gruber given that Atwood posted a public letter calling for change two years ago. Yes, these are all issues.

It adds valuable context, and it's in the title of the page itself, so you're violating HN's naming policy by removing it.

I think it's partly an artifact: due to a naming conflict, the git package in Debian used to be named "git-core" and was renamed "git" around then.

Naming in a sentence as an adjective

She overheard and decided to make an issue of it by naming and shaming them in a very public way while waving her employer's flag.

It we start naming and shaming the coder for each flaw instead of working on fixing the process that allowed it to sneak through, we'll see a chilling effect on open source software.

There's an interesting downside to naming your child something very unique- you become significantly more Google-able than "Tom Jones".

Formerly colleagues from the same department, now competitors with very similar education startups, all the way down to the naming conventions.

When clients are caught directly or indirectly using sock-puppetry and astroturfing on Wikipedia, banners should be added to the affected pages naming and shaming the clients.

Scientists are understandably enthusiastic about this, but they also have to keep in mind that when they just use words to describe the importance of the discovery without naming the discovery itself, its easy for them to get it very, very wrong.

Naming definitions

noun

the verbal act of naming; "the part he failed was the naming of state capitals"

noun

the act of putting a person into a non-elective position; "the appointment had to be approved by the whole committee"

See also: appointment assignment designation

adjective

inclined to or serving for the giving of names; "the appellative faculty of children"; "the appellative function of some primitive rites"

See also: appellative