Category:Meaningful Name: Difference between revisions

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{{IndexTrope|wppage=Aptronym}}
{{quote|'''Alexandria:''' This "Odious" -- he bad man?
'''Roy:''' Oh yeah.|''[[The Fall (film)|The Fall]]''}}
 
A name that has a direct, barely-hidden meaning to it. The first, last, or full name says something primal about the character. Often has multiple layers. To hide the meaning a bit, use an alternate spelling or foreign equivalent. Instead of writers having to make up random words or think of real names, they can use mythological names or old words.
 
As an example, it is common to use for heroic characters names associated with hunting. So, apart from Hunter, which is a valid first and last name in English, you can use a translation to another language (Jager, or the phonetic Yeager), or the name of a predatory animal (Wolf, Hawk) or a translation of that (Wolfe, Lupin, Lupis, Wulf). Which is kinda cool, which is why this can double up with [[Awesome McCoolname]].
 
Sometimes used more subtly; the [[Meaningful Name]] only becomes obvious in hindsight, but when the clincher is revealed it's a moment of "Now how did I miss that?"
 
[[Meaningful Rename|Self-chosen names]] can manifest this naturally, but may make the character look arrogant if the symbolism is too blatant. This can be a problem with [[The Magnificent|bestowed names]] as well; although the character didn't create it, if he ''accepts'' it without [[Think Nothing of It|much objection]], the effect is similar.
 
Very common in [[Western Animation|cartoons]], where the meaning is most times not hidden at all, except that the target audience may not have the vocabulary to get the joke. Also common in [[Anime]], since Japanese names have a lot of obvious literal meaning to start with. See notes at [[Theme Naming]].
 
Real-life examples of this are often referred to as "aptronyms". The magazine ''New Scientist'' refers to it as "nominative determinism" in a tongue-in-cheek manner, and encourages people to send examples in. The proper name for this trope is "charactonym".
 
This goes back to the Bible and probably turns up in the books of other religions, due to the way that names in many different cultures had significance beyond the merely cosmetic.
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Tropes of Legend]]
[[Category:Naming Conventions]]
[[Category:Older Than Dirt]]
[[Category:Fairy Tale Tropes]]
[[Category:Lit Class Tropes]]
[[Category:Bernard Werber]]
[[Category:Meaningful Name]]
[[Category:Show, Don't Tell]]
[[Category:Index Index]]
[[Category:Pages with working Wikipedia tabs]]
 
{{related|Prophetic Names}}
{{related|Steven Ulysses Perhero}}
{{related|They Call Him "Sword"}}
{{related|Name That Unfolds Like Lotus Blossom}}
{{related|Names to Run Away From Really Fast}}
{{related|Punny Name}}
{{related|Significant Monogram}}
{{related|Non-Indicative Name}}