All The Tropes:Renamed Tropes/A to E: Difference between revisions

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{{Useful Notes}}
== A ==
* [[Abandon Shipping]] was "Abandon Ship", and was moved to make room for [[Abandon Ship|a trope]] better reflecting common use of the term.
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* [[Barefoot Cartoon Animal]] was originally "Barefoot Funny Animal". It was renamed to match up with its [[Sister Trope|Sister Tropes]] [[Accessory-Wearing Cartoon Animal]], [[Half-Dressed Cartoon Animal]], and [[Fully-Dressed Cartoon Animal]].
* [[Basso Profundo]] was originally named "The Dish Rattler". It was renamed due to failure to thrive after over a year.
* [[Useful Notes/The Bechdel Test|The Bechdel Test]] was formerly known as "Bechdels Rule". Arguments over whether the "rule" was being broken in various works got the name changed to emphasize the testing of a work. Now moved to [[Useful Notes]].
* [[Behind a Stick]] used to be "Narrow Escape". It was renamed for having nothing to do with the common meaning of that phrase, or, for that matter, with escapes at all.
* [[Belligerent Sexual Tension]] was known for a while as "When a Jerk Loves a Tsundere". Before that, it was briefly known as "Tsunderes in Love" before it was decided as a misleading title since a jerk is not a Tsundere. ''Before that'', it used to be called a "Takahashi Couple", named for mangaka [[Rumiko Takahashi]] (whose works are known for prominently featuring such relationships), a name dropped when specific references in titles fell out of fashion.
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* [[Best Her to Bed Her]] used to be "The Red Sonja". It was renamed due to misuse, and because the trope only constitutes one of the traits of the [[Trope Namer]].
* [[Best Known for the Fanservice]] used to be "Everyone Remembers the Stripper".
* [[Big Freaking Gun]] was renamed from "BFG (weapon)" for consistency with other trope names as well as to eliminate confusion with the disambiguation page [[BFG]] as well as the Roald Dahl novel.
* [[Big Bad Wannabe]] was "Evil Frog Who Wants to Be an Ox", a title that is quite awkward in a sentence due to its length, requires more typing than ideal, and is not immediately connected to its subject unless the reader knows the specific [[An Aesop|Aesop]] and applies it correctly.
* [[Big Bulky Bomb]] used to be "BFB". It was renamed for being a confusing snowclone of [[BFG]].
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* [[Black Shirt]] was formerly known as "Jackals", since it was originally split off from [[Dying Like Animals]], which still recognizes it under that name.
* [[Blasphemous Boast]] was formerly "More Tropes than God", renamed to get away from "trope" as a placeholder.
* [[Bloody Murder]] was originally known as "Weaponized Blood" before it was lost in [[The Great Crash]]. It got its new title when it was relaunched.
* [[Bluff the Impostor]] was formerly "Cry Wolfie", after a scene in ''[[Terminator (franchise)|Terminator]] 2'' and as a pun on [[Crying Wolf]].
* [[Blunt Yes]] was once "Flat Yes". It was changed to be clearer.
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* [[Capital City]] was originally named after "Shattrath", an Outlands city in ''[[World of Warcraft]]''.
* [[Captain Morgan Pose]] was originally called "Riker Pose", renamed for greater recognition.
* [[The Caregiver]] was renamed from "The Caretaker" because the trope is about people who look after people (caregivers), not things (caretakers).
* [[Career-Building Blunder]] was "House Hiring Heuristic", after the lead of medical drama ''[[House (TV series)|House]]'' who followed the trope several times. But it's not hiring: it's promotion or other increases in trust and responsibility following a bad mistake -- something not apparent from the title. It also required specific work knowledge of the word "heuristic" for rule of thumb, which was tripping some folks up.
* [[Casanova Wannabe]] used to be "The Leisure Suit Larry", from ''[[Leisure Suit Larry]]''. The too-close names led to roughly half the ''[[Leisure Suit Larry]]'' links mistaking the game for the trope. (Originally the trope name was actually the same as the game, without the definite article.) Also, Larry is not a [[Casanova Wannabe]]: he always ends up with many conquests. He has to be the ''opposite'', a [[Kavorka Man]], for the games to work.
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* [[Cute Kitten]] was originally titled "Everything's Cuter with Kittens", a snowclone of the discredited [[Everything's Better with Indexes]] family. As with several similarly named tropes, the earlier name encouraged a list of all kittens regardless of portrayal.
* [[Cutting Off the Branches]] used to be named "Road Cone", but the old title was deemed too opaque.
* [[Cyclopean Creature]] was renamed from "Cyclops" because it covers any one-eyed creature, not just the monster from [[Classical Mythology]], and to open up the original name for a disambiguation page.
 
 
== D ==
* [[Damsel Scrappy]] was formerly known as "The Kimberly", named for Kim Bauer, designated [[Damsel in Distress]] from ''[[24|Twenty Four]]''.
* [[Danger Deadpan]] used to be called "Chuck Yeager". It was changed due to being a character -named trope and for being opaque.
* [[Danger Room Cold Open]] was called the long and unwieldy "Professor X Likes to Watch Teenagers Sweat", which was also loaded with (probably not unintentional) implications that make you think of a different trope.
* [[Dating Do-Si-Do]] was originally "Degrassi Dating". Lack of archived discussion prevents Trope Archaeologists from determining whether it was changed as part of a general purge of show-named tropes, or because it was [[I Thought It Meant|easily mistaken for]] a reference to the [[Totally Radical|totally]] [[The Eighties|'80s]] made-on-a-shoestring look of [[Degrassi Junior High|early incarnations]] [[Degrassi High|of the franchise]].
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* [[Dark Horse Victory]] was formerly "Zmelik", after an Olympic athlete (namely, the one that actually won the Decathlon gold in 1992, the year of "Dan vs. Dave").
* [[Dark Mistress]] was formerly "Doctor Girlfriend" after the character from ''[[The Venture Brothers]]''. Renamed due to the fact that there are several qualities of the "good" Doctor that could've attached to the trope and no way to figure out which was applicable from just a glance.
* [[A Day in the Limelight]] used to be "Good Troi Episode", but that name led people to think that it was a YMMV Trope.
* [[Dead Person Impersonation]] was originally "Martin Guerre", which was rewritten to cover the specific work of that title. [[Mad Men|The Don Draper]] may or may not have been considered.
* [[Death by Woman Scorned]] used to be "He Had It Coming".
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* [[Didn't Want an Adventure]] used to be "I Wanted to Go Bowling". The old name was trying to be a stock phrase and failed.
* [[Die Hard on an X]] was just named "Die Hard" for a really long time. It was renamed because it made searching for the trope as opposed to [[Die Hard|the movie]] next to impossible.
* [[Diegetic Theme Cameo]] was formerly "Name That Tune". It was changed for being named for [[Name That Tune|a show]] and not clearly suggesting an in-world cameo of a theme tune. Then it was "Theme Tune Cameo", which caused confusion when some Tropers listed occurrences of the theme tune used in the soundtrack as examples.
* [[Dies Wide Open]] was renamed from "Dies Wide Shut" in order to be less confusing and misleading.
* [[Digging Yourself Deeper]] was formerly "Bucket of Ears". However, that ''[[Coupling]]'' reference was just too unintuitive and resulted in most references all being related to Jeff from the show.
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* [[Dying Declaration of Love]] was known as "Going Down with the Ship". It was renamed so that the title could be used for the "captain goes down with his ship" trope.
* [[Dying to Be Replaced]] previously had the name of "Klingon Promotion", but was continuously misused to mean [[You Kill It, You Bought It]] and what is now [[Klingon Promotion]] (even in its own Laconic and Quotes pages).
 
 
== E ==
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* [[Exponential Plot Delay]] used to be "Zeno's Race", after an early mathematical theory of limits. The idea was a story that showed ever-greater plot delay could be metaphorically represented by Zeno's theory. In the theory, movement is impossible since no matter how many times you travel half a distance, you have an infinite number of half-distances to go. This was too much of a stretch for general readers.
* [[Exposition Fairy]] was originally named "Ninja Butterfly", after the game ''Red Ninja''. It was changed because Ninja Butterfly sounded like it's about [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|stealth lepidopteran assassins of shadow]], instead of "friendly advice-giving character who commonly makes you yell, '[[Stop Helping Me!]]!'"
* [[Exposition: The Board Game]] was imported from TVT as "Hollywood Board Game" before we threw it into the Trope Workshop and gave it a bit more explanation and some examples.
* [[Extranormal Institute]] was formerly known as "Wizarding School". People were taking the name literally, so EI was split off as the supertrope.
* [[Extroverted Nerd]] was formerly "The Urkel", and was renamed for being a character-named trope.
* [[Extra Y, Extra Violent]] was once "XYY", which didn't demonstrate the trope of an additional Y-chromosome leading to violent behaviour.
* [[Extreme Sport Excuse Plot]] was "Xtreme Sport Xcuse Plot", but the [[XtremelyXtreme CoolKool Letterz]] caused the trope to wither.
* [[The Extremist Was Right]] used to be "And It Worked", but was renamed to discourage misuse of the trope for the stock phrase itself.
* [[Eyelid-Pull Taunt]] was once "Red Eye", which could refer to both the movie ''[[Red Eye (film)|Red Eye]]'' and simple red eyes.
 
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| title = ''[[{{ROOTPAGENAME}}]]''
| list = <div>[[{{ROOTPAGENAME}}/A to E|A to E]] - [[{{ROOTPAGENAME}}/F to K|F to K]] - [[{{ROOTPAGENAME}}/L to P|L to P]] - [[{{ROOTPAGENAME}}/Q to Z|Q to Z]]</div>
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{{reflist}}
[[Category:Renamed Tropes{{ROOTPAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Split Trope Lists]]