Eponym in a sentence as a noun

* The name systemd is recast as an eponym for all init processes.

So there's no reason for the Linux distro to die with its once eponym mother company.

One of my favorite language nuggets—the word "guys" is an eponym—most historians trace it back Guy Fawkes.

More likely it is a reference to its eponym, the Banach-Tarski paradox.

Enlighting, I never realised what the eponym Amazon service meant until now.

' The scientific and medical communities regard it as bad form to attempt to eponymise oneself.

Playing off venality, a semi viral marketing state on many of the world's legacy PCs and a somewhat tainted name as the eponym does ... things.

Intellectual honesty is dead anyway, in a world where "fake it till you make it" is seriously considered good career advice.> Had you taken the care to actually read the article you linked, you'd notice that the name of the cycle is Milankovitch, regardless of the actual name of its eponym:I'm perfectly aware.

Honestly, though, does it really matter other than for fictional nationalistic bragging rights?> I bring this up in a comment here, and all I get is downvotesBecause you're acting like a snob?> It's Milanković actually, and that guy also has his own entry on WikipediaHad you taken the care to actually read the article you linked, you'd notice that the name of the cycle is Milankovitch, regardless of the actual name of its eponym:> The second contribution is the explanation of Earth's long-term climate changes caused by changes in the position of the Earth in comparison to the Sun, now known as Milankovitch cycles

Proper Noun Examples for Eponym

Being awarded an eponym is regarded as an honor: 'Eponymity, not anonymity, is the standard.

Eponym definitions

noun

the person for whom something is named; "Constantine I is the eponym for Constantinople"

noun

the name derived from a person (real or imaginary); "Down's syndrome is an eponym for the English physician John Down"