Film, Media & TV4 mins ago
name check
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I know what the phrase 'name check' refers to - but where did it come from? And why a name CHECK rather than a tick?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Both 'check' and 'tick', basically meaning 'correct' - as in that Nike symbol consisting of two short lines at an angle - date back to the early 19th century. (If you draw a checked pattern, it consists of a linked series of such symbols.)
Dickens used the earliest-recorded version, in the form of 'check off', meaning to mark as correct in 'Nicholas Nickleby'.
In British English, the words are in effect synonymous; in American usage, 'Check' can also mean 'I agree/that's right.'
I'm not totally sure what you mean when you say "when someone mentions the names of others". In my experience, a name-check happens only in such specific circumstances as when a teacher ticks/crosses off the names of present/absent pupils in the register.
In that respect, a name-check is no different from a book-check, an equipment-check, a shopping-list check or any one of a multitude of other possible checks...a situation in which someone reads down a list and marks with a tick each book/item/whatever that is present.
It is so general, that I can't imagine you will find where the phrase originated.
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