Noun : Brut, the supposed grandson of Aeneas, is the eponym of the Britons. From Dictionary.com.
News at Eleven: It's his use of poets as a lens that makes this opening section more than a story of Chile's struggles; moreover, Martin Espada suggests in the opening eponymic poem that poetry has an unusual importance for Chileans. From Wordnik.com. [News at Eleven: It's his use of poets as a lens] Reference
Mark Bagley had begun to stir consideration during a stint on an early 1990s contemporary and eponymic phenom comic book known as. From Wordnik.com. [Examiner California Headlines] Reference
If the eponymic character has not been proven to be either fictional or historical, that doesn't really matter as we tend to idealize more the undefined. From Wordnik.com. [Chinalyst - China blogs in English] Reference
From the later eponymic monthly publication, the silhoullettes from aspects of 1998 comics and the same year's social climate imprinted into a break out on-going title. From Wordnik.com. [Examiner California Headlines] Reference
Bæda also mentions a place called Tunna ceaster, so named from an abbot Tunna, who exists merely for the sake of a legend, and is clearly as unhistorical as his piratical compeer Hrof -- a wild guess of the eponymic sort with which we are all so familiar in Greek literature. From Wordnik.com. [Science in Arcady] Reference
Bates and Muller's eponymic. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2008-07-01] Reference
Ishiguro, Kazuo, eponymic elusiveness of, 123; "inky bleakness" of, 123. From Wordnik.com. [Who's Who] Reference
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