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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
byword
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ VERB
become
▪ His name became a byword for extreme luxury.
▪ Sulla's successor in the eastern command, Lucius Licinius Lucullus, became a byword for luxury and personal indulgence.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A different man for every child; a byword for disgrace.
▪ Britain was a byword for strikes.
▪ His name became a byword for extreme luxury.
▪ His reputedly Herculean virility long remained a byword throughout the district over which he held sway.
▪ Our Representatives Care and service are the bywords of an Enterprise representative.
▪ Reality was his byword and Drew's rugged features and dexterity with horses made him a natural choice.
▪ Sulla's successor in the eastern command, Lucius Licinius Lucullus, became a byword for luxury and personal indulgence.
▪ Until late antiquity Vulso's triumph remained a byword for luxury.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Byword

Byword \By"word`\, n. [AS. b["i]word; b["i], E. by + word.]

  1. A common saying; a proverb; a saying that has a general currency.

    I knew a wise man that had it for a byword.
    --Bacon.

  2. The object of a contemptuous saying.

    Thou makest us a byword among the heathen.
    --Ps. xliv. 14

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
byword

also by-word, Old English biword "proverb," formed on the model of Latin proverbium or Greek parabole. Meaning "something that has become proverbial" is from 1530s.

Wiktionary
byword

n. 1 A proverb or proverbial expression, common saying; a frequently used word or phrase. 2 A characteristic word or expression; a word or phrase associated with a person or group. 3 Someone or something that stands as an example (i.e. metonymy) for something else, by having some of that something's characteristic traits. 4 An object of notoriety or contempt, scorn or derision. 5 A nickname or epithet.

WordNet
byword

n. a condensed but memorable saying embodying some important fact of experience that is taken as true by many people [syn: proverb, adage, saw]

Wikipedia
Byword

Byword may refer to:

  • Byword (horse), a thoroughbred racehorse and sire from the United Kingdom
  • Byword (saying), a simple and concrete saying, popularly known and repeated, which expresses a truth based on common sense or practical experience (i.e. "a good byword to live by is 'prudence', especially when younger")
Byword (horse)

Byword (foaled 13 February 2006) is a British-bred, French-trained Thoroughbred racehorse and sire. Unraced as a two-year-old, he showed promising form, winning two of his four races including the listed Prix Pelleas. In the following year he emerged as a world-class performer, winning the listed Prix Jacques Laffitte before defeating strong fields in both the Prix du Muguet and the Prince of Wales's Stakes. In the same year he also finished second in the Prix d'Ispahan and third in the International Stakes and was rated one of the twenty best racehorses in the world. As a five-year-old he added wins in the Prix du Chemin de Fer du Nord and the Prix Dollar before being retired to stud. He is currently (2015) standing a breeding stallion in South Africa.

Usage examples of "byword".

I should tamely submit to be a derided, outcast husband, that I should take no vengeance upon, that villainous Pope for having made me a thing of scorn, a byword throughout Italy?

As a result, he was naturally a hissing and a byword to all decent people, as he would have known, if he had ever associated with decent people which, of course, he did not, only with other lost souls like himself.

His explanation made it sound possible, even somewhat simple, as if they were looking for the boy in a section of New York and not in the wilderness and ruined towns in the thousands of square clicks of O-Zone, which was itself a byword for everything unknown and unfathomable and empty and strange.

His fidelity to his wife was as pure as a poet could imagine, and his courage a byword in the army.

It had finally been swept aside by the forces of an increasingly nervous secular state empowered by a sickened populace, but its name lingered as a byword for terror, sadism and savagery, and all that is foul in human nature.

The haggard, distressed countenances of these miserable, complaining, dejected, living skeletons, crying for medical aid and food, and cursing their Government for its refusal to exchange prisoners, and the ghastly corpses, with their glazed eye balls staring up into vacant space, with the flies swarming down their open and grinning mouths, and over their ragged clothes, infested with numerous lice, as they lay amongst the sick and dying, formed a picture of helpless, hopeless misery which it would be impossible to portray bywords or by the brush.

The byword in Mos Eisley, which looks like a cluster of populated sand dunes, is camouflage.

And that eternal honour which should live Sunlike, above the reek of mortal fame, Changed to a mockery and a byword?

The watershed was a j umble of ridges and swales and some of the streams wandered out to the little Muskrat River in the wilderness eastward, a nightmare region of thickets and 136 huge boulders, a byword amongst the older lumbermen.

I am positive when I say that if need were I could produce a cloud of witnesses to the excellence of her noble exercitations which, so far from being a byword, should be a glorious incentive in the human breast.

Her ever smiling lips and laughing eyes had caused him to crave her body, and when he had accomplished that and found it was all she had to offer, and had turned from her constant demands, she had proffered her favors elsewhere, not discreetly, which he might have borne, if not forgiven, but openly, until her name became a byword.

Thy lewd and Circean life shall be dragged to day--thy mumming oracles disclosed--the fane of the idol Isis shall be a byword and a scorn--the name of Arbaces a mark for the hisses of execration!

His explanation made it sound possible, even somewhat simple, as if they were looking for the boy in a section of New York and not in the wilderness and ruined towns in the thousands of square clicks of O-Zone, which was itself a byword for everything unknown and unfathomable and empty and strange.

So this was the famous Artur Blord, the man whose courage and audacity was a byword, the great operator who always outsmarted his enemies, the financial and industrial wizard who never failed to deliver the goods.

She knew the cagebirds had no such abilities - she had once or twice tried to communicate with them - in fact, "the mind of a cage-bird" was a byword for a stupid woman!