- - roland garros, vis-à-vis the french open
- - Euclid, vis-à-vis geometry
- - Euclid, vis- -vis geometry
- - Amerigo Vespucci, vis-à-vis America
- - Amerigo Vespucci, vis- -vis America
- - Romulus, vis-à-vis Rome
- - Romulus, vis- -vis Rome
- - Romulus to Rome, e.g.
- - What Romulus was to Rome
- - Penn, vis-à-vis Pennsylvania
- - Penn, vis- -vis Pennsylvania
- - Romulus, vis- -vis Rome, e.g.
- - Romulus, for one
- - His name is the book title, or poem written out about New York
- - Knut's firm refusal upset America, for one
- - Exchange money while keeping penny for Zeppelin, perhaps
- - English horse, male. Black Beauty perhaps?
- - Setter about to eat £25 Caesar salad, perhaps
- - Hoover, say, setting me back about £25
- - Place name that comes from person in the pony market
- - Name juvenile in centre of demo
- - Like Knutsville named after Knut? Knut raised about £25
- - european horse primarily mentioned in hamlet, maybe?
- - Name derived from a name
- - Dame Nellie Melba, for Melba toast
- - Noun formed after a person
- - Name record on my back!
- - Sandwich or leotard, e.g.
- - Namesake of a sort
- - The verb Tebow, for one
- - Shirley Temple, as a noun
- - George Washington, often
- - Curie, Tesla or Fermi
- - Appellation origin
- - Marcel Bich, for Bic
- - Jacuzzi, for example
- - Person after whom something is named
- - Source for many units of physics
- - Alison Bechdel, for the Bechdel test
- - Character who gives a play, etc its title
- - Name derived from a person
- - Fahrenheit or Celsius
- - Word derived from a name
- - Name-lending person
- - George Ferris, for the Ferris wheel
- - Franz Mesmer, for "mesmerize"
- - Name of a thing derived from a person
- - Word derived from a person's name
- - James Parkinson or Alois Alzheimer
- - Word derived from someone's name
- - Henry Ford, e.g
- - Horse breaking into a sort of dash in Dallas or Washington?
- - Item name derived from a person
- - Baron De La Warr or William Penn
- - Tesla or Volta, e.g.
- - Namesake
- - Sousaphone, for one
- - Record of US city monument's first distinguishing title
- - Washington or Lincoln, many times over
- - Person for whom something is named
- - Penn, to Pennsylvania
- - Earl of Sandwich, e.g.
- - Arnold Palmer or Shirley Temple, drinkwise
- - Louis Braille or Louis Chevrolet
- - Jim Beam or Jack Daniel
- - Watt or Ohm, e.g.
- - Name-giver
- - The Earl of Sandwich, for one
- - Rob Roy or Shirley Temple
- - General Shrapnel or Burnside
- - Karl Benz or Henry Ford
- - Shirley Temple, to Shirley Temples, for one
- - Person from whom something takes its name
- - Rudolf Diesel, for one
- - Person from whom something is named
- - Gabriel Fahrenheit or Anders Celsius
- - General Anthony Wayne, to Waynesboro
- - Shirley Temple or Tom Collins
- - Name identified with a place
- - Sam Houston, to Houston
- - Ampère or Watt
- - Name derivation
- - Monroe for Monrovia
- - "Mae West" for "life jacket"
- - Named derived from a person
- - Rudolf Diesel, re the diesel
- - Thursday from Thor e.g.
- - Name source
- - Columbus, to Colombia, e.g.
- - Name giver of a sort
- - Person for whom a nation or city is named
- - Hellen, to Hellenes.
- - What Penn is to Pennsylvania.
- - What William Penn is to Pennsylvania.
- - Presumed ancestor of a race, nation, etc.
- - Saxophone or sandwich
- - Ohm or joule, e.g.
- - Tresses
- - See 16-Across
- - Distinguishing title to open my translation
- - Zeppelin, perhaps lifting me over mount
- - brummie's refusal to do a turn as the title character
- - Place name derived from a person
- - Kind of dash astride horse in St Albans or Telford?
- [ Edit ]
- [ Other definitions ]