| 释义 | 
		Definition of patronymic in English: patronymicnoun patrəˈnɪmɪkˌpætrəˈnɪmɪk A name derived from the name of a father or ancestor, e.g. Johnson, O'Brien, Ivanovich.  a patronymic derived from the name of their original lordship  Example sentencesExamples -  Adult acquaintances and casual friends usually talk to each other using the first name combined with the patronymic.
 -  Addressing someone formally also entails using the person's full name and patronymic.
 -  Documents dating between 1521 and 1524 attest that he had assumed the cognomen Lieto, the Italian version of Laetus, substituting this for his actual patronymic, Allegri.
 -  A Russian system of patronymics is still widely used.
 -  Explaining patronymics to a four year old is always a difficult thing.
 -  Xhosa speakers are patrilineal and have patronymic clans, but neither clans nor lineages have any ‘on the ground’ existence.
 -  The memory trick of naming individuals by patronymics, or ‘sloinneadh’ in Gaelic, is the centuries-old system of placing an individual within an extended family system.
 -  Her patronymic should follow in the next two lines, consisting of her father's gentilicium and Greek cognomen.
 -  She replied addressing him Russian style using his patronymic.
 -  They were always smart and neatly dressed, and always called each other - in public - by their first name and patronymic.
 -  Probably more significant is the fact that Brown was one of the many neutral names adopted by clansmen who wanted to be rid of their politically incorrect Gaelic patronymics.
 -  It is interesting that their usual surnames are all patronymics or matronymics, rather than the locatives that would be more likely were any of the four from immigrant families.
 -  I'm now 99% sure I have at least one of the patronymics wrong, so again, I solicit advice on them.
 -  Thus, everyone has a patronymic, or father's name.
 -  However, she later explains that Adriaen did not use the patronymic.
 -  Although a government decree in 1856 ended patronymics, some 60 percent of all present day Danish names end in ‘sen’ with Jensen and Nielsen being the most common.
 -  As the daughter's patronymic appears immediately after her name, so the same patronymic should also appear in column III immediately after her mother's name, here as husband.
 -  In the novel we do not learn Luzhin's patronymic until the last sentences.
 -  Iceland also upholds another Norse tradition - using patronymics rather than surnames.
 
 
 adjective patrəˈnɪmɪkˌpætrəˈnɪmɪk Denoting or relating to a name derived from the name of a father or male ancestor.  the patronymic naming of children 
 Origin   Early 17th century: via late Latin from Greek patrōnumikos, from patrōnumos, from patēr, patr- 'father' + onuma 'name'. Rhymes   bulimic, gimmick, metronymic, mimic, pantomimic    Definition of patronymic in US English: patronymicnounˌpætrəˈnɪmɪkˌpatrəˈnimik A name derived from the name of a father or ancestor, typically by the addition of a prefix or suffix, e.g., Johnson, O'Brien, Ivanovich.  Example sentencesExamples -  A Russian system of patronymics is still widely used.
 -  Explaining patronymics to a four year old is always a difficult thing.
 -  They were always smart and neatly dressed, and always called each other - in public - by their first name and patronymic.
 -  Her patronymic should follow in the next two lines, consisting of her father's gentilicium and Greek cognomen.
 -  It is interesting that their usual surnames are all patronymics or matronymics, rather than the locatives that would be more likely were any of the four from immigrant families.
 -  I'm now 99% sure I have at least one of the patronymics wrong, so again, I solicit advice on them.
 -  Probably more significant is the fact that Brown was one of the many neutral names adopted by clansmen who wanted to be rid of their politically incorrect Gaelic patronymics.
 -  Thus, everyone has a patronymic, or father's name.
 -  She replied addressing him Russian style using his patronymic.
 -  Documents dating between 1521 and 1524 attest that he had assumed the cognomen Lieto, the Italian version of Laetus, substituting this for his actual patronymic, Allegri.
 -  However, she later explains that Adriaen did not use the patronymic.
 -  In the novel we do not learn Luzhin's patronymic until the last sentences.
 -  Xhosa speakers are patrilineal and have patronymic clans, but neither clans nor lineages have any ‘on the ground’ existence.
 -  Iceland also upholds another Norse tradition - using patronymics rather than surnames.
 -  As the daughter's patronymic appears immediately after her name, so the same patronymic should also appear in column III immediately after her mother's name, here as husband.
 -  Although a government decree in 1856 ended patronymics, some 60 percent of all present day Danish names end in ‘sen’ with Jensen and Nielsen being the most common.
 -  Adult acquaintances and casual friends usually talk to each other using the first name combined with the patronymic.
 -  Addressing someone formally also entails using the person's full name and patronymic.
 -  The memory trick of naming individuals by patronymics, or ‘sloinneadh’ in Gaelic, is the centuries-old system of placing an individual within an extended family system.
 
 
 adjectiveˌpætrəˈnɪmɪkˌpatrəˈnimik Denoting or relating to a name derived from the name of a father or male ancestor.  the patronymic naming of children 
 Origin   Early 17th century: via late Latin from Greek patrōnumikos, from patrōnumos, from patēr, patr- ‘father’ + onuma ‘name’.     |