AstraZeneca

English

Etymology

From AstraZeneca, a pharmaceutical and biotechnology company that created the vaccine. The company name was formed by the merger of Astra AB and Zeneca. Astra is from Ancient Greek ᾰ̓́στρον (ắstron, star), whereas Zeneca, the company stated, “is an invented name, created by an agency instructed to find a name which began with a letter from either the top or bottom of the alphabet and was phonetically memorable, of no more than three syllables and did not have an offensive meaning in any language.”[1]

Proper noun

AstraZeneca (countable and uncountable, plural AstraZenecas)

  1. (neologism) The COVID-19 vaccine made by the AstraZeneca company.
    • 2021 April 1, 5:10 from the start, in No More Jockeys[2], season 4, episode 5, spoken by Tim Key:
      Have you been injected with AstraZeneca, la la la la la?
    • 2021 April 15, Matt Gurney, “Please put a shot of AstraZeneca in my arm”, in TVO Today[3]:
      Just a few weeks ago at TVO.org, I wrote about the anecdotes I’d been hearing of people who were outside of the targeted age range getting AstraZeneca doses at pharmacies lest vaccine spoil.
    • 2021 July 2, The NT News, Darwin, page 22, column 2:
      I am over the age of 60. I have a choice of AstraZeneca, AstraZeneca or AstraZeneca - or die of Covid.
    • 2021 October 27, John Skerritt, quotee, “COVID Pfizer vaccine booster shots have been approved — here is what we know so far”, in ABC News (Australia)[4]:
      "Mixing and matching, so for example, two AstraZenecas, and then a Pfizer, or even one AstraZeneca and a Pfizer, actually gives a really good immune response," he said.

References

  1. ^ AstraZeneca (17 October 2019) Twitter[1], archived from the original on 17 October 2019