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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Naming

Name \Name\ (n[=a]m), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Named (n[=a]md); p. pr. & vb. n. Naming.] [AS. namian. See Name, n.]

  1. To give a distinctive name or appellation to; to entitle; to denominate; to style; to call.

    She named the child Ichabod.
    --1 Sam. iv. 21.

    Thus was the building left Ridiculous, and the work Confusion named.
    --Milton.

  2. To mention by name; to utter or publish the name of; to refer to by distinctive title; to mention.

    None named thee but to praise.
    --Halleck.

    Old Yew, which graspest at the stones That name the underlying dead.
    --Tennyson.

  3. To designate by name or specifically for any purpose; to nominate; to specify; to appoint; as, to name a day for the wedding; to name someone as ambassador.

    Whom late you have named for consul.
    --Shak.

  4. (House of Commons) To designate (a member) by name, as the Speaker does by way of reprimand.

    Syn: To denominate; style; term; call; mention; specify; designate; nominate.

Wiktionary
naming
  1. Associated with the process of giving a name to a person or thing. n. 1 A ritual or ceremony in which a name is given to a person. 2 The process of giving names to things. 3 The act of announcing the name of a person, organization etc. v

  2. (present participle of name English)

WordNet
naming
  1. adj. inclined to or serving for the giving of names; "the appellative faculty of children"; "the appellative function of some primitive rites" [syn: appellative, naming(a)]

  2. n. the verbal act of naming; "the part he failed was the naming of state capitals"

  3. the act of putting a person into a non-elective position; "the appointment had to be approved by the whole committee" [syn: appointment, assignment, designation]

Wikipedia
Naming

Naming is assigning a name to something.

Naming may refer to:

  • Naming (parliamentary procedure), a procedure in certain parliamentary bodies
  • Naming ceremony, an event at which an infant is named
  • Product naming, the discipline of deciding what a product will be called
Naming (parliamentary procedure)

Naming is a procedure in the British House of Commons, Australian House of Representatives and the New Zealand Parliament, whereby the Speaker or one of his or her deputies proposes a vote on the suspension of a member of the House if the Speaker believes that the member has broken the rules of conduct of the House. Usually this is only done if the member has already been ordered to leave the House (which automatically leads to suspension for the remainder of that day) and refused to do so, or has committed a serious breach of conduct, and carries a suspension of up to five days and the loss of the Member's salary during that period.

In the British House of Commons, the procedure to name Members is under Standing Order 44. Members can be suspended for the remainder of the day under Standing Order 43 (previously numbered as Standing Order 42).

The Speaker or Deputy Speaker declares "I name", followed by the name of the member; and invites the leader or deputy leader of the house to move the motion that the member be removed and then puts the question: A division is not normally required since MPs will usually back the speaker's judgement. However, when John McDonnell was named by deputy speaker Alan Haselhurst on 15 January 2009 for manhandling the parliamentary mace a division was called because George Galloway and other members declared themselves with the Noes. A vote on the suspension was not held as the government refused to provide tellers.

In the Australian House of Representatives, the procedure to name members is under Standing Order 94b. Members can be removed from the house for an hour under Standing Order 94a. The difference between these two Standing Orders is that if a member is removed under Standing Order 94a the removal is not open to a division. If a member is named under Standing Order 94b the removal is open to a vote. If a member is named, the Speaker declares, "I name", followed by the Electoral Division of the member, and then the Leader of the House moves the question:

If the vote passes by a simple majority then the member is required to leave the house for 24 hours.

The procedure has also been used once in the Massachusetts Senate. On October 27, 1981, Senate President William M. Bulger named Senator Alan Sisitsky after Sisitsky continuously disrupted the Senate proceedings. Sisitsky was then removed from the Senate Chamber by a court officer. The matter was referred to the Senate Ethics Committee, which recommended that Sisitsky be suspended indefinitely until he issued a formal apology to the Senate.

Usage examples of "naming".

He invited me to come and spend a whole day with him, naming the days when I would be certain to find him at home, but he advised me to consult the Pacha Osman before accepting his invitation.

Tara right beside him, trying to call the lost horses out there, naming their names in the ambient, names not all of which he knew.

The court looked to call its new knight Ancel, for that he had once served in the kitchens, and no one gave any more thought to his naming than that, for the days of the False Janiffer were long passed.

Sieur had been naming the settlements to honour the original founders: Vithrancel for Ancel Den Rannion, Hafreinsaur for Hafrein Den Fellaemion.

Being in want of water, and his ship having suffered much by storm, the sight of some birds from the south induced him to hold his course that way, when he soon discovered a large country to which he gave the name of Austral India and Terre Australle, naming the inhabitants Australians.

Michael said, feeling none of the hesitance or awkwardness he would have once experienced on naming his occupation, his obsession.

I promised to come, as I was obliged to do, but I begged to be excused naming the day.

It did not strike her that the name of Ross Bland should have appeared upon the front page in big headlines, while that of Dana Brye could be included among those of persons who had gone somewhere, without naming the exact destination.

Bornhald had had no hesitation in naming Byar second under him when Eamon Valda gave him the command.

In a community where racial tensions run high, the naming leadership of Miller Dawkins has been something to behold.

He entered the enclosed space of the courtyard, mentally naming what was in it, the shade-happy euonymus and lobelia, the dark-star coleus, the honey locust with its pinnate leaves and unsplit pods.

This party, finding it impossible to influence the nomination of both members, contented itself with naming one, it being the mutual condition, in return for favouring the Government candidate, that the Government party should not oppose the choice of the liberals.

During the course of their work Guyton had become a convert to the new chemistry, and the book was as much a piece of propaganda for the new chemistry as it was a treatise on naming chemicals in a consistent way.

The agent spoke tersely, telling what he had learned from Jolles, naming Finger Lurbin as the aid of unknown killers who had ridden with the aviator.

Olaf Triggvison was in Lade, and there came to him a man naming himself Kark, bringing with him the severed head of Earl Hakon, which he offered to the king.