黑料网’s In A Name: 18 Popular Brands

Number two in our miniseries of 鈥満诹贤檚 In A Name鈥 deals with popular brand names and their etymology. While some names are easy to figure out鈥擣ord cars are named after Henry Ford鈥攐ther brand name origins are a bit more complex, or in some cases, convoluted.

Nike

Nike refers to the Greek winged goddess of victory as well as a tactical missile of the 1940s. As far as your feet are concerned, the story goes like this. When the shoes were about to go to production, the brand name was 鈥淒imension 6.鈥 Nike employee number one Jeff Johnson literally woke up from a dream with the word Nike in his head, and that鈥檚 what they went with. You’d have to agree at this point the name was a good choice.

Sometimes a quirky twist of fate is a lot more productive than an expensive focus group! As an aside, a college student designed the Nike Swoosh, and was paid the princely sum of $35. Nike took care of her later on, but imagine what’s like to look at people鈥檚 feet and know that鈥檚 your work.

Adidas

The German sports company鈥檚 name is a portmanteau of their founder Adi Dassler鈥檚 name. That’s their original logo at left, known as the trefoil. Talk about sibling rivalries鈥攈is brother Horst started a rival shoe company and named it Puma.

Volkswagen

The German automaker鈥檚 name translates to 鈥減eople鈥檚 car.鈥 Autoblog adds the prototype鈥檚 name was 鈥淲ork Through Joy鈥 which wouldn’t fit on the hood as a badge. And let鈥檚 not forget that nutty 贵补丑谤惫别谤驳苍眉驳别苍 campaign. (That translates to 鈥渄riving enjoyment.鈥)

GE

General Electric. Nothing special here, just wanted to throw you a curve.

Lexus

When it came time to name the new Toyota high-end brand, an ad agency came up with names that included 鈥Vectre, Verone, Chaparel, Calibre and Alexis,鈥 according to Wikipedia. Alexis was the apparent front-runner but was scrapped over concerns 鈥渋t applied to people more than cars,鈥 with 鈥淎lexis Carrington鈥 of the then-popular TV show Dynasty as an example. Famous Logos says the name Alexis morphed to Lexis, and finally to its present form.

Xerox, Band-Aid, and Kleenex

Xerox, Band-Aid and Kleenex are brand names with interesting histories. The key point here is that all have become synonymous with the thing they鈥檙e used for. If you need a copy made, you Xerox it, despite having a Canon or Toshiba copier. Xerox is derived from the word xerography, which is 鈥渁 photographic reduplication without liquids.鈥

The same thing goes with Kleenex. Got a runny nose? No problem, where’s that box of Kleenex? Dictionary.com says 鈥淭he creators came up with the name, 鈥榓n arbitrary alteration of ‘clean’ plus brand-name suffix -ex.鈥欌

Now, if you鈥檝e got a cut, you need a Band-Aid. There are many different products that serve the same purpose, but this is the name that has stuck. So to speak. According to Dictionary.com, 鈥渢his trademark was registered by Johnson & Johnson for a stick-on gauze pad or strip. It can also be used in the context of applying a makeshift solution to a problem, as in ‘the proposed reform isn’t thorough enough to be more than just a band-aid.’鈥

Comcast

A portmanteau of the words communication and broadcast.

Cisco

The tech giant’s name is merely a shortening of “San Francisco,” and you can see the Golden Gate in its logo. They were founded in The City in 1984, but are now in San Jose.

CNN

An easy one, the Cable News Network. But in the early days when they struggled, others would refer to them as the “Chicken Noodle Network.” CNN has managed to prosper in spite of that early nickname, it would seem.

IKEA

Right, this is a tough one. According to Wikipedia, the store name is “a composite of the first letters in the Swedish founder Ingvar Kamprad’s name, in addition to the first letters of the names of the property and the village in which he grew up: Ingvar Kamprad Elmtaryd Agunnaryd.” Great, now let’s head to their cafeteria for some of those terrific meatballs.

Sharp

The electronics giant created an ever-sharp pencil as its first product. The name stuck, but they’ve moved on from pencils.

Samsung

The word means “three stars” in Korean.

Pringles

Pringles, the quirky potato chip in a can. Wikipedia has several thoughts on the name origination. One is that a fellow named Mark Pringle filed a patent on how to process potatoes. Another possibility is that a pair of Procter and Gamble employees lived on Pringle Drive in Finneytown (north of Cincinnati) and the name paired well with the word potato. Yet another theory suggests the name was pulled out of a local phone book. It’s interesting to ponder these possibilities, especially when you consider the creative resources of a giant like P&G. Once again, some of the most popular names are derived from the least likely sources.

Sony

Adweek equates the brand name Sony to the Latin word for sound, which is sonus. They say that the word also comes from the founders considering themselves to be 鈥溾榮onny boys,鈥 a borrowed word in Japanese that suggests smart young men.鈥

Volvo

Wikipedia cites the Swedish car company’s name as coming “from the Latin word volvo, which means ‘I roll.’ It was originally a name for a ball bearing being developed by SKF.”

7-Eleven

The convenience store chain was known as “Tote’m” but changed the name in 1946 to reflect, you guessed it, the store hours.

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