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Benannt

Benannt is the past participle of the German verb benennen, meaning to name or to designate. In contemporary usage it can function as part of a passive construction or as an adjective to indicate that something has received a name. For example, Der Ort wurde benannt. and Die Straße ist nach dem Dichter benannt. In both cases the emphasis is on the act of giving a name rather than on the name itself.

One common construction is to describe eponymous naming with benannt nach. This is used to express that

Benannt differs in nuance from genannt (called or named). Genannt is a more general term for giving

Etymologically, benannt derives from be- plus benennen (to name), with Namen meaning name. The related noun Benennung

a
person,
place,
or
thing
has
been
named
in
honor
of
someone
or
something.
Examples
include
Der
Fluss
ist
benannt
nach
König
Friedrich
or
Das
Museum
ist
benannt
nach
dem
Maler.
The
phrase
benannt
nach
signals
the
rationale
for
the
designation
and
is
frequently
encountered
in
geography,
history
and
official
naming.
a
name
or
reference
in
speech,
while
benennen/benannt
carries
a
sense
of
formal
designation
or
official
naming,
often
in
institutional
or
administrative
contexts.
In
everyday
language
siehst
du
beide
Formen,
aber
benennen
tends
toward
formal
or
technical
usage.
refers
to
the
act
or
process
of
naming
and
is
used
in
linguistic,
administrative
or
philosophical
discussions
about
designation
and
terminology.
In
German-language
reference
works,
benannt
is
commonly
encountered
in
sections
on
toponymy,
awards,
and
formal
designations.