From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A retronym is a new name for an object or
concept to differentiate the original form or version of it from a
more recent form or version. The original name is most often
augmented with an adjective (rather than being completely
displaced) to account for later developments of the object or
concept itself. Much retronymy is driven by
advances in technology.
Examples of retronyms are "acoustic
guitar" (coined when electric guitars appeared),[1]
World War I (called
the "Great War" or just the "World War" until World War II) and analog watch to
distinguish from a digital watch.[2]
The word retronym also refers to an acronym constructed after
the fact (a backronym), such as Perl.[3] It is
also used to refer to a word formed by reversing the spelling of
another word, e.g., mho from ohm.[4]
Word
history
The term retronym was coined by Frank
Mankiewicz in 1980[1]
and popularized by William Safire in The New York
Times.[1][2]
In 2000, The
American Heritage Dictionary (4th edition) became the
first major dictionary to include the word retronym.[5]
Examples in various
fields
Consumer
products
- The usage of "Classic" may be derived from a famous retronym:
the relaunch of Coca-Cola as "Coca-Cola Classic" after the
failure of what is now called the New Coke recipe change. When Apple began selling new
touch-screen variants of its iPod
music player, the original form-factor iPod was renamed iPod
Classic.
- In the early 2000s, liquid dish detergent became available as a
concentrate,
allowing a bottle of the same size to be used to wash more (or
dirtier) dishes. The common nomenclature for such products was
"ultra" strength (e.g., Ultra-Dawn). Some consumers prefer the
original (and generally cheaper) formulas, which in some cases are
still available in a re-labeled "non-ultra" form.
Art and
literature
The designation of a period or of an artistic or literary style
as "classical" is invariably
a retronym; such a designation is given only retroactively, when
the heritage of the period in question has been judged and found
worthy by a later culture.
Careless use of retronyms in historical fiction can cause anachronisms. For
example, referring to the "First World War" in a piece set in 1935
would be incorrect — "The Great War" or "14-18 War" were commonly
employed descriptions prior to World War II. Anachronistic use of a
retronym could also betray a modern document forgery (such as a description of the First Battle of Bull Run
before the second had taken place).
Politics
and government
- U.S. President George H.W. Bush
was ubiquitously known, both during and following his
administration, as "George Bush" and "President Bush". However,
when his son George W. Bush was elected president in
2000, the elder Bush became retroactively known as "George H.W.
Bush". The need to distinguish between the two presidents also
spawned colloquialisms such as "Bush Senior" and "Bush 41" for
George H.W. Bush.
- Posthumous
names awarded in East Asian cultures to royalty after their
death can be considered retronyms too, although their birth names
will remain unambiguous.
Technology
With the introduction of advanced telephone technology (ISDN,
ADSL etc.) the original telephone service became known as PSTN (Public switched telephone
network) or POTS (Plain old
telephone system)
Audio
- The original amplitude-modulated consumer radio broadcast
system was termed "AM" (or "standard broadcast") when
frequency-modulated ("FM") broadcasting began.
- Single-channel audio was the norm until stereo
equipment became available, prompting the retronyms "monophonic" and
"monaural" (sometimes simply "mono").
- The advent of satellite radio has prompted the term
terrestrial radio.
- Compact Discs,
originally developed as a high-fidelity digital audio media, were
later adopted for use as a general data medium. Thus, "CD-ROM" (for data) prompted the
retronym "CD Audio", "CDDA", or "Red
Book CD" (because of its Rainbow Book standard).
- In 2007, the original line of Apple iPod
portable audio players received a retronym suffix, becoming the iPod classic line, to
be more easily distinguished from other iPod product lines.
Motion
pictures
The first mass-distributed films were monochrome and silent. As the
technology developed:
Television
Television has prompted several retronyms:
Telephone
Telephone calls were
originally completed through the assistance of an operator
at a switchboard. When self-dialing
service became available, the older service was referred to as
"operator assisted" dialing. Later, tone-based dialing prompted
the older service to be retronymed "pulse" dialing. The older
phones were also referred to as "rotary dial" phones,
to differentiate from the newer phones with a keypad.
The advent of digital telephony services such as ISDN led to
analog services being described as "plain old telephone
service" (or simply "POTS"), primarily within the telephone
industry. As mobile
telephones have become prevalent, many consumers have come to
refer to POTS as "land line" phone service – although calls placed
on such a line may traverse wireless links such as microwave and satellite.
Computers
Geography
- India and Indonesia were known by Europeans as "the Indies",
until their discovery of the Caribbean (which they called the West
Indies) led to the necessity of the retronym East Indies.
- During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Mexico was sometimes referred to
(particularly in the U.S.) as "Old Mexico", to differentiate
it from the territory and later state of New Mexico. "Old
Mexico" is an example of a retronym that gradually fell into
disuse, and is rarely heard today outside of Westerns.
- Simón
Bolívar united Venezuela, New Granada, and Ecuador under the name
Colombia. After the union was later dissolved, New Granada changed
its name to Colombia.
Historians coined the term Gran Colombia (Great Colombia) to
refer to Bolivar's union.
Entertainment
- In entertainment media, a retronym can be applied to a property
that becomes a franchise and requires the source
property to be differentiated from others in the franchise.
- The original 1960s Star Trek television series, which
is now referred to as Star Trek: The Original Series to
distinguish it from the many film and television sequels that
Star Trek has spawned.
- The Indiana
Jones film Raiders of the Lost Ark is
now referred to as Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost
Ark to match the title of its prequel and two sequels.
- Both of the above titles remain unchanged on their onscreen
title cards.
- The first Star
Wars movie to be filmed and released was originally titled
simply Star Wars; after the film became a success and
sequels were assured, the film was subtitled Episode IV: A New
Hope for all subsequent releases.
- CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, which is set in Las Vegas,
Nevada, has spawned two spin-off series, CSI: Miami
and CSI: New York. The original series' title has not
changed, but it is syndicated in some markets with
the new title CSI: Las Vegas.
- A similar set of relabellings is used to refer to Japanese anime series, which are given
non-sequential additions to their titles.
- Mobile Suit Gundam, the
original show from 1979, is either called First Gundam or
Gundam 0079.
- "Classic" is often applied to the first computer game in a
franchise, especially if the sequels are numerically titled. This
is often necessary to access references to the original game on the
internet by means of a search engine, which would catch all the
subsequently numbered games as well. Examples include:
- Counter-Strike was more commonly
known among gamers as Counter-Strike 1.6 or CS 1.6 after the
release of Counter-Strike: Source.
- Command &
Conquer was frequently referred to as Tiberian
Dawn after its sequel Tiberian Sun was
confirmed, and also because it lent its name to the series.
- Left 4
Dead is starting to become more commonly known as "Left 4
Dead 1" with the announcement of Left 4 Dead 2.
See also
References
- ^ a
b
c
Safire, William (January 7, 2007). "Retronym". New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/07/magazine/07wwln_safire.t.html. Retrieved 2008-07-25. "The
Merriam lexies, always strong on etymology, cite the earliest usage
they can find of retronym in this column in 1980, which credited
Frank Mankiewicz, then president of National Public Radio, as the
coiner. He was especially intrigued by the usage hardcover book,
which was originally a plain book until softcover books came along,
which were originally called paperback and now have spawned a
version the size of a hardcover but with a soft cover trade-named
with the retronym trade paperback."
- ^ a
b
c
Safire, William (November 1, 1992). "Retronym Watch". New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CEEDB153AF932A35752C1A964958260. Retrieved
2008-07-25.
- ^
O'Reilly - Safari Books Online
- 0596101058 - Learning Perl, 4th Edition
- ^
Verbatim
- ^
"New words for old
times". Wisconsin State Journal. http://www.madison.com/wisconsinstatejournal/features/61879.php. Retrieved 2009-01-03.
"Retronyms. We use them, and create them, almost every day, but
most people don't know what they are. Don't reach for your
dictionary; you won't find it there. Not unless it's the current
American Heritage dictionary - the only one, to date, to list the
word"
- ^ "The Wheelmen FAQ: What do you
call high wheel bicycles?". http://www.thewheelmen.org/sections/faq/faq.asp#9. Retrieved
2009-01-23.
- ^
Miller, David (2004), The Illustrated Directory of Warships
from 1960 to the Present Day, Greenwich Editions, London. ISBN
0-86288-677-5