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Appellatives

Appellatives, in linguistics, refer to words that name classes of objects or concepts rather than individual entities. The term also covers forms of address or titles used to call someone. Thus an appellative can be a common noun like "dog" or "city," or a title used in social interaction such as "Mr.," "Dr.," or "Your Honor."

The word originates from Latin appellativus meaning naming or appellation, from appellare meaning to call upon.

Examples distinguish genuine appellatives from proper names: "dog" is an appellative, while "Fido" is a proper

Cross-linguistic considerations: many languages separate common nouns and proper names through articles, inflection, or dedicated honorific

Related topics include onomastics, honorifics, and nominal classification.

In
linguistic
analysis,
the
term
helps
distinguish
the
naming
function
of
ordinary
nouns
from
the
identifying
function
of
proper
names.
name.
In
forms
of
address,
appellatives
include
honorifics
such
as
"sir,"
"madam,"
or
"doctor."
They
function
to
call,
refer
to,
or
address
a
person
within
a
social
context.
systems;
some
rely
on
context
or
pronoun
use
to
convey
formality
and
social
relations.