omonimo
namesake; homonymous
adjective noun oh-MOH-nee-moh Rare
Origin: Greek homonymos (having the same name), from homos (same) + onoma (name)
Usage Note
Omonimo as an adjective means 'of the same name' (il romanzo omonimo = 'the eponymous novel'), and as a noun it means 'namesake' or 'homonym' (sono omonimi = 'they are namesakes'). In linguistics it specifically refers to words that sound alike but differ in meaning. The seed listed it as an adjective; it functions as a noun too, so both are given.
Examples
"Il film è tratto dal romanzo omonimo."
Natural Translation
The film is adapted from the novel of the same name.
Literal Translation
The film is drawn from-the novel namesake.
Related Words
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