The verb name can be used as a verb, as a pronoun as an object, as a compound object of a complement, etc. The details are as follows:
name? British [ne?m] American [nem]?
1. Noun n. Name; reputation; having... name; famous person
2. Verb? vt. determine; decide; name...; name...
3. Adjective? adj. famous; name it accordingly
Usage of name as a verb
1. When name is used as a verb, it means "to name..." or "to name...". By extension, it can mean "nomination, appointment" or " enumerate".
2. Name is a transitive verb and can be connected to a noun or pronoun as an object. When the solution is "name", a noun can be used as the compound object of the complement; when the solution is "nomination, appointment", the word "(to be/as/for) n." can be used as the compound object of the complement.
3. When expressing "named after...", British English often says name?after, while American English uses name?for.
Extended information:
1. Usage of name as a noun
1. The basic meaning of name as a noun is "name, name", which can be a person The name can also be the name of an animal, thing or place, and is a countable noun. Name can also be used as the meaning of "celebrity".
2. When name is interpreted as "fame, reputation", it generally refers to society's evaluation of a person or something. It is a singular noun and can be used with the indefinite article a.
3. Name can be used as an attributive to modify other nouns, meaning "famous, famous".
4. Western names include surname and given name, with the given name in front and the surname in the back. For example, John Smith, John is the given name and Smith is the surname.
2. Basic sentence patterns
1. Used as transitive verb S name n./pron.
Have you named the new baby yet?
p>Have you named the new baby?
2. Used as object complement verb S name n./pron. (to be/as/for ) n.
Her father named her Kitty.
Her father named her Kitty