From Veronal to Quviviq: A Lexicological Analysis of Trade Names for Prescription Sleeping Pills from 1903 to 2022 Pascaline Faure 37-48 2024-12-02
“May Change Name and Pretend to be Free”: A Corpus Linguistic Investigation of Surnames Adopted by Fugitive Slaves As Advertised in Colonial American Newspapers Between 1729 and 1818 I M Laversuch 191-203 2011-12-01
An Enterprise-Naming Inspiration in the United States: The Geographical Panhandle Michael D. Sublett 32-45 2025-06-16
Hitlers and Others who Changed their Names and a Few who Did Not Robert M. Rennick 199-207 1969-09-01
Comment vous appelez-vous?: Why the French Change Their Names James E. Jacob, Pierre L. Horn 3-28 1998-03-01
Children's Names as a Reflection of Ideological Differences among Israeli Parents Abraham Stahl 283-294 1992-12-01
The Distinctive Hispanic Names (DHN) Technique: A Method for Selecting a Sample or Estilmating Population Size Abraham D. Lavender 1-16 1992-03-01
In The Name of Hate: An Editorial Note on the Role Geographically Marked Names for COVID-19 Have Played in the Pandemic of Anti-Asian Violence I. M. Nick 2021-05-14
Dangerous Christenings: the Case of Code Names of French Secret Agents in the Second World War Henri Diament 30-47 1986-03-01
Names and Narcissism: A Clinical Perspective on How Parents Choose Names for Their Newborn Meir Nadav, Michal Ephratt, Stanley Rabin, Asher Shiber 90-103 2011-06-01
English Name Use by East Asians in Canada: Linguistic Pragmatics or Cultural Identity? Kevin Heffernan 24-36 2010-03-01
Runaway Slave Names Recaptured: An Investigation of the Personal First Names of Fugitive Slaves Advertised in the Virginia Gazette Between 1736 and 1776 Iman Makeba Laversuch 331-362 2006-12-01
Bibliography of Placename Literature, United States and Canada, 1980-1988 Margaret S. Powell, Stephen D. Powell 49-142 1990-06-01
A Note of Remembrance in Honor of Edwin David Lawson (December 23, 1923—July 3, 2021) Aaron Demsky 2021-08-16