| Words derived from names |
Eugene Sheffer |
02 Oct 2025 |
| Spy on me, travelling in Bolivia and Colombia? |
The Times Cryptic |
17 Sep 2025 |
| Watt and Ohm, e.g. |
LA Times Daily |
12 Dec 2024 |
| Namesakes |
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| bloomers and sideburns |
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| Opens my translation with Hamlet and Faust for example |
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| Steve Bradbury (in "do a Bradbury"), and Nellie Melba (in "Do a Melba") (7) |
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| Arnold Palmer and Shirley Temple, e.g. |
LA Times Daily |
08 Oct 2023 |
| Many measures of physics |
Newsday |
23 Jun 2023 |
| Ones after whom others are named |
New York Times |
20 Mar 2023 |
| Ohm, Hertz and Newton |
New York Times |
20 May 2021 |
| Nikola Tesla and Louis Chevrolet |
Newsday |
27 Oct 2017 |
| Watt and Ampere, to the watt and ampere |
USA Today |
15 Feb 2017 |
| Cardigan and leotard, e.g |
The Washington Post |
22 Jan 2017 |
| My peons, oddly, are persons whose names are used to name other places or things |
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| Louis Braille and Les Paul |
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| People who lend their names to things |
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| Jules Léotard and Amelia Bloomer, for two |
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| Seattle and Vancouver |
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| People things are named for |
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| Names turned into words |
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| Curie, Kelvin and Fermi |
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| Leotard and Silhouette, e.g. |
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| Name-givers |
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| People after whom things are named |
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| Words derived from people's names |
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| Theme of this puzzle |
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| Honorees, in a way |
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| Those who lend their names |
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| People after whom things are named |
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| Names derived from people |
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| Guillotine and Oscar, e.g. |
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| Léotard and Silhouette, e.g. |
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| William Penn and others |
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| Ancestors for whom tribes are named |
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| Achilles' heel and Adam's apple, e.g. |
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