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English
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Etymology
From Latin nōmen nesciō (“I do not know the name”).
Pronunciation
Noun
nomen nescio (plural nomina nescio)
- (Latin phrase) See the Latin section for definitions.
1997, Henrik Wenzel, Michael Hauschild, Leo Alting, “Environmental assessment of products”, in Methodology, tools and case studies in product development, volume 1, Kluwer Academic Publishers, →ISBN, page 208, →ISBN:As is evident in the figure, the allocation is always between one product and the average pool of products (product NN (nomen nescio)) which supplies or takes from the pool of material.
1998, Alan Tyson, Sieghard Brandenburg, Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven: Studies in the Music of the Classical Period — Essays in Honour of Alan Tyson, Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 128, →ISBN:Firstly, a word concerning ‘N.N.’. It was Nissen’s usual practice when obliterating names in the autographs of the letters (a nickname is actually involved here, as we shall see) to write above or by them ‘N.N.’, an abbreviation which can stand variously for ‘nomen nescio’, ‘nomen nominandum’, or ‘non nominato’. As used by Nissen, the abbreviation has the sense of ‘X’, as in ‘Mr. X’.4
2002, Alexander García Düttmann, Nicholas Walker, The Memory of Thought: An Essay on Heidegger and Adorno, Continuum International Publishing Group, →ISBN, page 218, →ISBN:The ‘that’ stands in a relation of gradual opposition to the name: the more illegible the name, the more exposed its bearer. Not only the artist: his work still bears his name, even if it also bears another name or title. What is true of the name of the artist is true in every case of the name of the work of art, unless, of course, the name of the artist remains unknown and the name of the work is known. From the name still to be named (nomen nominandum) and the unknown name (nomen nescio) no path, only a thrust leads to the mere bearer, the bearer without a name.
- 2007: Jon Stewart, Kierkegaard’s Relations to Hegel Reconsidered, §10: “The Polemic with Heiberg in Prefaces”, page 419 (Cambridge University Press; →ISBN, 978-0521039512)
- Prefaces appeared on June 17, 1844, the same day as The Concept of Anxiety. The pseudonymous author, Nicolaus Notabene, refers to himself in the text simply as N.N. These initials correspond, whether by accident or design, to the Latin phrase “nomen nescio”, or “I do not know the name”, which was a typical form of anonym.
Synonyms
Latin
Etymology
From nōmen (“name”) + nesciō (“I do not know”).
Pronunciation
Phrase
nōmen nesciō
- A filler in a text that indicates an anonymous or non-specific person.