first-name

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See also: first name

English

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Etymology

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Denominal verb of first name.

Verb

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first-name (third-person singular simple present first-names, present participle first-naming, simple past and past participle first-named)

  1. (rare) To address by first name.
    Coordinate term: last-name
    • 1982, Elaine Chaika, “Style of speech”, in Language: The Social Mirror, Rowley, Mass.: Newbury House Publishers, Inc., →ISBN, sections 18 (Summons, greetings, address) and 21 (The United States, a case in point), pages 46–48:
      Physicians are first-named only by close family, friends, and colleagues in the United States. [] First-naming has extended itself to one group who formerly were sacrosanct: teachers and professors. [] Since it is, indeed, a privileged patient who first-names his or her physician, one cannot help feeling, in many such instances, that this is a way of affirming special status.
    • 1983 September, Peter H[artley] Gott, “Forced Familiarity”, in Connecticut Medicine: The Journal of the Connecticut State Medical Society, volume 47, number 9, New Haven, Conn.: Connecticut State Medical Society, →ISSN, pages 578–579:
      Most adults are in the habit of addressing children, menial workers and the disadvantaged by their first names. [] As onerous as this arrogation may appear, it is not nearly as malignant as the present custom of first-naming women, minorities and the elderly, particularly if they happen to be ill. [] The most useful test of whether unsought informality presents problems is this: when practitioners feel comfortable being first-named by their patients.
    • 2016, Sarah Conrad Sours, “Mad Manners: Courtesy, Conflict, and Social Change”, in Ann W[illiams] Duncan, Jacob L[ynn] Goodson, editors, The Universe is Indifferent: Theology, Philosophy and Mad Men, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: The Lutterworth Press, published 2017, →DOI, →ISBN, Part 1 (Business Ethics), pages 55–56:
      By last-naming those whom I am expected to last-name and by answering to my first name when those who are authorized to first-name me do so and by insisting that those unauthorized to first-name me use my last name, I submit to and enforce the distribution of status that drives naming conventions.