[
US
/ɛˈpɔˌnɪməs/
]
[ UK /ɛpˈɒnɪməs/ ]
[ UK /ɛpˈɒnɪməs/ ]
ADJECTIVE
- being or relating to or bearing the name of an eponym
How To Use eponymous In A Sentence
- Their eponymous album is out now. Times, Sunday Times
- Lanchester's second novel follows a day in the life of its eponymous hero.
- The fresh tale follows the familiar style of the original - the eponymous hero magically transported from a suburban fancy-dress shop to a new world.
- The band's eponymous debut was recorded in a slapdash fashion.
- But that's not what their eponymous debut album sounded like. Times, Sunday Times
- But the top act is the eponymous Triplets, sister divas who sing and swing with tireless exhilaration.
- ‘Un Secret, a movie about ordinary Jewish people in extraordinarily savage times, is a current success with French moviegoers, and Claude Miller, who adapted the film from Philippe Grimbert’s eponymous novel, is surprised. Vitro Nasu » 2008 » January
- The real surprise was that the eponymous anti-hero isn't the central character.
- Their eponymous debut album is of a calibre very rarely found in indie music (until this year, seemingly).
- Stetson, her latest novel, is told from the first person voice of its eponymous character.