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1Suppose you go see a film called ''The Boat''. Movie starts and it takes place as far away from a body of water as is possible. No boats. An hour can pass and you won't see a single boat. But just when you were thinking "maybe it's a WordSaladTitle", it [[TheReveal is revealed]] that the characters suffered such a horrific shipwreck that they are now afraid to even [[ChangeTheUncomfortableSubject speak of anything]] related to boats and the ocean. Expect to [[https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=F8mYLi3PGOc hear someone in the theater go]], "[[WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy Oh, that's why they call it that.]]" This trope is similar to a TitleDrop except that a character need not say it aloud.
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3A namesake is the thing within a story after which the story itself is named. It could be [[TheEponymousShow a character]], [[ThePlace a place]], an object, or indeed a metaphor. Often, the namesake is [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin rather obvious]] (''Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet'' is obviously named that way because there's a character called "Romeo" and another called "Juliet"; ''Literature/TheTimeMachine'' obviously includes a machine to [[TimeTravel travel through time]]), but sometimes, authors (or film studios) want to use titles that draw attention, and that's when the namesake may not appear until the end of the story, or might indeed only be a metaphor for a certain situation in the story which doesn't become clear until the end. In short, this becomes a trope when the reason why the book/movie/chapter/episode/etc. is called the way it is, isn't revealed to the audience until [[NowYouTellMe near the end]]; regardless of whether the characters [[EverybodyKnewAlready knew about it all along]] or not. If the book/movie/chapter/episode is named after a pivotal plot point rather than an actual person/place/thing, then it's a SpoilerTitle.
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5Examples below should be stories where either what the title "promised" wasn't delivered until rather late in the story, or the title seemed [[NonindicativeName non-indicative]], and later was revealed to be physically in the story. Please do not put stories whose name was [[JustForFun/IThoughtThatWas intentionally misleading]] all along, with the title thing never actually appearing.
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7Sometimes, this is turned on its head when titles that the audience expects to refer to a metaphorical namesake [[JustifiedTitle become literal]]. As an example, if you haven't read Asimov's short story "Nightfall", you'll probably think the title is a metaphor for the situation the characters find themselves in, similar to Creator/StephenieMeyer's use of the title ''Twilight''. Asimov's story, in fact, revolves literally around an imminent sunset, which is an event the characters have never experienced.
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9May be {{lampshade|Hanging}}d if, once the namesake finally appears, a character asks, "[[Headscratchers/HomePage why do they call it that?]]" usually immediately after the TitleDrop.
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11Compare JustifiedTitle, when an apparently thematic title is revealed to really be a reference to some concrete element within the story, and EpunymousTitle when it's a {{pun}} on the main character's name.
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13Not to be confused with NamesakeGag, the book and film entitled ''Film/TheNamesake''. In literary circles, this is called an "eponym", a term also used to refer to a CharacterTitle. This is a SuperTrope to MetafictionalTitle, where the namesake is a book or something else that characters read.
14----
15!!Examples:
16[[foldercontrol]]
17
18[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
19* ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'' is a doozy one. At first, it doesn't seem to refer to ''anything'' in particular and is probably thanks to [[Creator/TiteKubo the author]]'s fondness for GratuitousEnglish. Kubo eventually admitted that the title is a substitute; he originally wanted to title it "White", but thought that "Bleach" (which means the same thing) is [[RuleOfCool more awesome]] and decided to use it instead, which begs the question: what does "White" mean? [[spoiler: It refers to an artificial Hollow created by Aizen for use to attack the Human World. The Hollow was repelled by Masaki, Ichigo's Quincy mother, but it managed to bite her during the battle, causing her to develop a Hollow mutation that was passed down to her son. In fact, White looks exactly like how Ichigo looks when he sports his Hollow form, except more feral.]] This information is only revealed in the final arc, more than a decade after the manga was first published.
20* ''Anime/{{Charlotte}}'' is never mentioned by any of the characters until episode 11, when it becomes the title of the episode. [[spoiler:It's revealed in the episode that "Charlotte" is the name of a long-orbit comet that approaches Earth in 75-year cycles. When it does, it showers the planet in [[AppliedPhlebotinum strange particles]], and these particles are the source of the mysterious abilities prevalent throughout the series.]]
21* ''Manga/ComicGirls'' does this as [[FictionalDocument the title of]] [[spoiler:Kaos' first approved manuscript]] in Episode 11.
22* ''Franchise/{{Gundam}}'' series tend to be named for the protagonist's HumongousMecha, but there are a few noteworthy exceptions. The most prominent is ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED Gundam SEED]]'', which is named for an in-universe theory about an innate factor that [[HollywoodEvolution lets them advance to the next stage of evolution]]. Naturally, it's possessed by the four central characters (and the protagonist of [[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEEDDestiny the sequel]]).
23** Frequently, the title refers to the protagonist's MidSeasonUpgrade rather than their original mobile suit; the [[Anime/MobileSuitZetaGundam Zeta Gundam]], [[Anime/MobileSuitGundam00 00 Gundam]], and [[Anime/MobileFighterGGundam God Gundam]] [[note]]The dub calls it the Burning Gundam; theoretically, the show should have been called B Gundam...[[/note]] come to mind.
24* ''Anime/TengenToppaGurrenLagann'': The title refers to the final form of [[HumongousMecha Gurren Lagann]], which doesn't appear until the last episode.
25* The meaning behind ''Manga/YourLieInApril'' is revealed in the final episode of the anime/final chapter of the manga. [[spoiler:Kaori lied about liking Watari and used their relationship to get closer to his best friend: Kousei, the guy she truly loved all along.]] When was that lie being told? Spring, in April.
26* In episode 4 of ''Anime/YuriOnIce'', Yuuri Katsuki decides that "Yuri on Ice" will be the name of the piece of music he'll be skating to for the upcoming Grand Prix, which is revealed after he writes the name of the piece on the CD. The piece itself is meant to embody Yuuri's career as a skater, which is especially important since this will be [[TheLastDance his last season]].
27[[/folder]]
28
29[[folder:Comic Books]]
30* Creator/DCComics' ''ComicBook/FiftyTwo'' at first seems like a reference to its RealTime format a la ''Series/TwentyFour'' (each issue covering the span of a week and published weekly for one year), though a number of gratuitous 52s were thrown around. Near the end it's revealed that it refers to [[spoiler:fifty-two parallel universes - after being destroyed in the ''ComicBook/CrisisOnInfiniteEarths'' twenty years ago, TheMultiverse has returned.]]
31* The English title for the ''ComicBook/{{Tintin}}'' adventure ''Recap/TintinTheRedSeaSharks'' references an element which only shows up at the end of the story. In most other languages, this album is known as "Coke on Board", with "coke" or some variant being a code word for [[spoiler: human cargo being shipped to slavery]].
32[[/folder]]
33
34[[folder:Fanfiction]]
35* The subtitle for ''[[https://www.fimfiction.net/story/85294/id---that-indestructible-something I.D. - That Indestructible Something]]'' (visible on the cover image and shown in the individual chapters) is ''Injector Doe''. This looks like a pair of random words until it's revealed that it refers to [[spoiler:a random person (a "John Doe") accidentally modifying the virtual simulation that is our reality (i.e. "injecting code") with sheer force of will]].
36* ''Fanfic/StarsAbove'': The title initially refers to TheProphecy given before the events of the story, relating to TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt: "All will come to ruin, and the stars above will fall." [[spoiler:By the final chapter, the five main characters know of the prophecy, and [[Manga/LuckyStar Kagami]] decides to ScrewDestiny and uses Stars Above as the name of their MagicalGirl team. Her rewording of the latter half kicks off the final battle: "The Stars Above will ''rise!''"]]
37[[/folder]]
38
39[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
40* ''WesternAnimation/OneHundredAndOneDalmatians'' repeatedly counts the Dalmatian puppies in the film, reinforcing throughout it that there ''aren't'' 101 of them. There are 15 puppies, with their parents bringing the number to 17. It isn't until the end that their family adopts the 84 other Dalmatian puppies that Cruella acquired, and Roger proclaims, "That's 84, and 15 plus two is a hundred and one!"
41* Disney's ''WesternAnimation/ThePrincessAndTheFrog'': Tiana, the film's heroine, only eventually becomes a princess by ''marriage'', and the frog is actually a prince.
42* ''WesternAnimation/{{Ratatouille}}'' is this, especially to those who are unfamiliar with French cuisine. Most audiences can be forgiven for thinking that the title alludes to the film's main protagonist, who is a rat, not helped with the film's pronunciation guide that lists it as "rat-a-too-ee". It actually refers to a real French dish, albeit a low-class one, and it's suggested and prepared only at the climax of the film to satisfy the CausticCritic that the protagonists are facing.
43[[/folder]]
44
45[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
46* One might wonder why a film without a single character named Amy is called ''Film/ChasingAmy'' until almost the very end, when Silent Bob finally refers to her.
47* ''Film/GrandCanyon'': About 99% of the movie takes place in and around Los Angeles, which is several hours of driving and nearly 400 miles away from the Grand Canyon. While the Grand Canyon is [[TitleDrop title dropped]] a few times in different contexts ("Ever been to the Grand Canyon?", "A hole as big as the Grand Canyon"), it isn't until the very final moments of the film that the main characters actually visit it.
48* ''Film/LandscapeWithInvisibleHand'': Adam's various art pieces are shown at different points throughout the movie, with the title and medium shown onscreen. The final shot shows him beginning a mural, which shares a name with the film's title.
49* ''Film/{{Lion}}'': At the end of the movie, it's revealed "Lion" is the meaning of Saroo's given name.
50* The Peter Sellers/Ringo Starr vehicle ''Film/TheMagicChristian'' is about the title's cruise ship which (a) doesn't appear till the third act, and (b) turns out to be a sham.
51* ''Film/ThePhantomMenace'' has an interesting title, especially compared to the self-evident titles of the other ''Franchise/StarWars'' movies. Namely, it raises the question, who is the "phantom menace"? Darth Maul, as the [[NeverTrustATrailer advertising campaign would suggest]]? Senator Palpatine, the [[TheChessmaster mastermind behind it all]] who [[DevilInPlainSight hides behind a respectable front]]? The Sith in general, who are supposed to be extinct? Or perhaps [[StartOfDarkness Anakin]], who at this point is only a "phantom" of the "menace" that he will one day become? (According to WordOfGod, it's the second; it helps that Darth Sidious only appears once not in hologram form, making him mostly sort of a VirtualGhost.)
52* ''Film/{{Populaire}}'' is titled after a revolutionary (for its time) French typewriter of The50s, Japy's ''La Populaire''. It isn't introduced until about half an hour into the film.
53* ''Film/{{Serendipity}}'': The title refers to the restaurant that is the site of Jonathan and Sarah's first date as well as the themes of the movie (Fate and Destiny).
54* The title of ''Film/{{Skyfall}}'' initially just seems to have been chosen because it sounds cool, with the only obvious meaning coming from [[NoOneCouldSurviveThat James Bond surviving a seemingly fatal fall from a bridge]] in the first scene. Then, in the last third of the movie, we find out that [[spoiler: it's the name of Bond's family estate in Scotland]].
55* ''A Time for Drunken Horses'' is not a metaphor; you ''will'' see intoxicated equines.
56* In the original version of ''Film/TheWickerMan1973'', the man of wicker in the title isn't shown or otherwise mentioned until the very end of the movie.
57* ''Film/{{Zardoz}}'': The film's eponymous God turns out to be [[spoiler:''The Wonderful Wi'''Zard''' of '''Oz'''''.]]
58[[/folder]]
59
60[[folder:Literature]]
61* The book of ''Literature/TheHundredAndOneDalmatians'' has this even more than the movie, because there ''aren't'' 101 Dalmatians for most of the book: there are Pongo and Missus, the original 15 puppies, the puppies' foster-mother Perdita, plus the additional 82 puppies Cruella had, giving a total of 100 Dalmatians. The narrator actually [[BreakingTheFourthWall mentions this problem in the second to last chapter]], promising that the 101st Dalmatian will be along soon.
62* "Literature/TheAnglersOfArz", by Creator/RogerDee, features octopuses that use humanlike land creatures as bait to capture flying lizards for sport.
63* Creator/IsaacAsimov:
64** ''Literature/BlackWidowers'':
65*** "Literature/ThePointingFinger": The eponymous finger refers to the DyingClue left by Mr Levy's grandfather-in-law; he was pointing to the inheritance he had hidden.
66*** "Literature/TheLullabyOfBroadway": The title refers to the sound of the street, made by traffic and the sirens of police cars, ambulances, and fire engines. Rubin also uses it to refer to the inconsistent hammering that he's been hearing.
67*** "Literature/YankeeDoodleWentToTown": The title is a reference to an old American song, which the person Colonel Davenheim is questioning has been humming unconsciously.
68*** "Literature/OutOfSight": The [[OrwellianRetcon original title]], "The Six Suspects" refer to the six people that Mr Long suspects of photographing the classified information from his stateroom.
69*** "Literature/TheIronGem": The original title, "A Chip of the Black Stone", references the guest's lucky rock as a piece broken off from the famous [[MagicMeteor Kaaba/Black Stone]] of UsefulNotes/Islam.
70*** "Literature/TheIronGem": Dr Asimov's preferred title, "The Iron Gem" references the guest's lucky rock as a gemstone due to the guest's profession as a jeweller.
71** "Literature/ABoysBestFriend": The title refers to the popular English phrase "a dog is man's best friend", modified to focus on a child instead. However, the titular "best friend" isn't a real dog like the [[UnnamedParent parents]] want for their son; it's a RobotDog.
72** ''Literature/DavidStarrSpaceRanger'': The 1963 German translation calls this volume "Gift from Mars", which refers to the unusual mask given to David by the native Martians.
73** "Literature/TheDeadPast":
74*** During the resolution, Department Head Araman explains to Potterley, the historian, that the past begins in the present, making them the same thing, from the perspective of the {{Chronoscope}}.
75----> "The dead past is just another name for the living present. What if you focus the chronoscope in the past of one-hundredth of a second ago? Aren't you watching the present?"
76*** The German title is "Das Chronoskop" and the Italian title is "Il cronoscopio". Both translations promote the [[{{Chronoscope}} time-viewing device]] to titular importance due to its impact on the story.
77** ''Literature/FoundationSeries'':
78*** "Literature/TheEncyclopedists": The original title was ''Foundation'', and it refers to the Encyclopedia Foundation, whose Board of Trustees make most of the decisions for Terminus. [[spoiler:Actually, Hari Seldon refers to them as his Foundation to create a second galactic empire, and a companion Foundation at the opposite end of the galaxy.]]
79*** "Literature/TheEncyclopedists": The revised title refers to the Board of Trustees, who are in charge of making the ''[[GreatBigBookOfEverything Encyclopedia Galactica]]''.
80*** ''Literature/Foundation1951'':
81*** The title, [[TitleDropChapter reused from the first story]], refers to the (first) Foundation, which Hari Seldon arranged to have colonized the distant planet Terminus.
82*** The alternative title, ''The 1,000 Year Plan'', refers to Hari Seldon's [[ThePlan Plan]] for a mere thousand years between the collapse of the Galactic Empire and the rise of the next Galactic Empire.
83*** "Literature/TheTraders": The original title, "The Wedge", refers to trade being the wedge that needs inserting into foreign cultures so that the Foundation can introduce their ScamReligion and slowly subvert control from the other interplanetary nations.
84*** "Literature/TheTraders": The [[OrwellianRetcon revised]] title, "The Traders", refers to a subculture of Foundation agents. Limmar Ponyets is a member of said culture, and this story demonstrates how they use guile and salesmanship to convince the foreign markets to buy Foundation technology.
85*** ''Literature/FoundationAndEmpire'': The title derives from the [[Literature/TheGeneralFoundation first conflict]] of the book, the conflict between General Bel Riose of the central Galactic Empire, and the [[RisingEmpire growing nation of the Foundation]], out along the periphery of the galaxy.
86*** ''Literature/FoundationAndEmpire'': The 1963 publication by Creator/AceBooks is instead titled ''The Man Who Upset the Universe''. Rather than meaning the conflict of failing Empire versus rising Foundation, this title is based on the [[Literature/TheMule second conflict]] of the book, where a {{mutant|s}} rises from nothing to smash the Foundation, [[GalacticConqueror conquering what took it three centuries to do in less than three years]], as well as the remnants of the Galactic Empire.
87*** ''Literature/FoundationAndEmpire'': The 1974 Italian translation (by Creator/{{Oscar}}) [[MarketBasedTitle changed the title]] to "Il crollo della Galassia Centrale", which roughly translates in English as "The collapse of the Central Galaxy". This refers to the events of both stories, the way the Galactic Empire collapses from their position as a strong central GalacticSuperpower, to a small part of the Mule's galactic conquest.
88*** "Literature/TheGeneralFoundation": The original title, "Dead Hand", refers to Hari Seldon's [[ThePlan Plan]] created by [[PrescienceByAnalysis psychohistory]]. Seldon has been dead for centuries, yet Ducem Barr contends that it is more powerful than the Galactic Empire.
89*** "Literature/TheGeneralFoundation": The revised title, "The General", refers to General Bel Riose of the Galactic Empire, who hears about [[ThePlan Seldon's Plan]] from Ducem Barr but wishes to [[AntagonistTitle conquer the Foundation]] despite it.
90*** ''Literature/SecondFoundation'': The title refers to an organization that had been left deliberately vague up until now. Hari Seldon supposedly established two Foundations; one on Terminus and the other on the opposite end of the galaxy. Not only are the Mule and the Foundation on Terminus (usually called the Foundation or the First Foundation) looking for them, but they must be turned into protagonist characters so that the audience can root for their victory over the Mule. At the end, the true location of the Second Foundation is finally [[TheReveal revealed]].
91** ''{{Literature/Franchise}}'': The title refers to the right to vote, so the story revolves around how voting changes based on [[PrescienceByAnalysis predictive algorithms]].
92** "Literature/GreenPatches":
93*** The titular "Green Patches" refer to the [[BizarreAlienSenses alien organs]] that allows the Saybrook lifeforms to communicate via {{Telepathy}}.
94*** The titular "Misbegotten Missionary" ([[OrwellianRetcon the original title]]) is the VillainProtagonist who wants to share their type of "[[HiveMind unified life]]" with all of Earth.
95*** An InUniverse example is [[NamingYourColonyWorld Saybrook's Planet]], which was named after the Captain of the ship who discovered it and blew up his ship to prevent the AssimilationPlot from reaching Earth.
96** "Literature/TheHazing": Because this is the first group of humans from Earth to join the college, some of the college sophomores take it upon themselves to [[WackyFratboyHijinx create a new hazing ritual to welcome them]].
97** "Literature/HellFire1956": The title refers to [[MadeOfEvil flames from the bowels of hell]], powered by {{Satan}} himself; atomic bombs.
98** "Literature/HomoSol": In this story, all known sentient life is {{Humanoid|Aliens}}. The various species are called Homo (for human) and then designated by the star system they evolved from. The title refers to mankind from our solar system; Humans of Sol.
99** "Literature/TheImaginary": The title refers to imaginary numbers in the mathematical notations for [[FictionalFieldOfScience the alien's use of psychology]].
100** "Literature/TheImmortalBard": The title refers to Creator/WilliamShakespeare, and his universal writing appeal. Dr Welch had hoped, because Shakespeare understood humanity in a timeless fashion, that he would be able to adapt to present-day culture.
101** "{{Literature/Jokester}}": Meyerhof's methods of socializing is to share jokes with other people, [[InSeriesNickname earning the nickname]] of "Jokester".
102** "Literature/KidStuff": The story is an oblique defense against the [[ScifiGhetto Fantasy genre ghetto]]. Blanche would prefer her husband wrote MysteryFiction so that she could proudly tell her neighbours what her husband did for a living and dismisses the whole {{Fantasy}} genre as "kid stuff". Their son, ten years old, also dismisses such stories as "kid stuff" ([[IronicEcho despite killing an elf only hours before]]).
103** "Literature/TheLastTrump": The word 'trump' is short for trumpet, and the title refers to ArchangelGabriel's horn being used to announce Judgement Day and the resurrection of everyone who has ever died.
104** "Literature/TheMartianWay": Ted Long, our protagonist and colonist of {{UsefulNotes/Mars}}, is obsessed with what he calls "The Martian Way". To him, it is the [[SettlingTheFrontier frontier spirit/culture]] that has developed due to their distance from Earth. Many things are "The Martian Way" for him, but midway through the story, during [[InterplanetaryVoyage the trip]] to {{UsefulNotes/Saturn}}, he talks about how building more colonies and expanding human civilization is the destiny of Martian colonists, not Grounders from Earth.
105** "Literature/TheMessage": The title refers to KilroyWasHere, a MemeticMutation left by the time-traveller.
106** "Literature/MirrorImage": The title refers to the way both mathematicians claim the same facts, but reverse ownership and actions, like a mirror reverses left and right.
107** "Literature/MySonThePhysicist": The title refers to Senior Physicist Gerard Cremona, a government researcher. He's currently dealing with a crisis that [[GreaterScopeVillain may have far-reaching consequences]], but as far as his mother is concerned, [[AlwaysAChildToParent he's still her little boy]].
108** "Literature/Nightfall1941": The characters spend the story preparing for [[TotalEclipseOfThePlot an eclipse of the last sun in the sky]], plunging the world of EndlessDaytime into the first night in 2,049 years. The characters can't even TitleDrop the event, saying instead that Lagash will "enter a cave of Darkness".
109** ''Literature/Nightfall1990'':
110*** The title of ''Nightfall'' reflects an event that happens every 2049 years.
111*** InUniverse, the Acolytes of Flame have named themselves after the Time of Flame, when the gods rain fire down on Kalgash for the sins of humanity. An event that occurs every two thousand, forty-nine years.
112** "{{Literature/Risk}}": This story revolves around risks, the risk of [[FateWorseThanDeath losing all higher cognitive abilities]], the risk of losing [[NewTechIsNotCheap an expensive experimental spaceship]], and the risk of danger to robots. Dr. Calvin, [[IronLady coldly analytical robopsychologist of US Robotics]], has determined that the risk of losing another robot is too high, and tells Black that he must take the risk instead.
113** ''Literature/TheRestOfTheRobots'': The preface of "Part II: The Laws of Robotics" explains that this [[{{Anthology}} collection]]'s title comes from it containing stories that were not included in ''Literature/IRobot''. As Dr Asimov was inclined to continue writing stories, an interested reader may wish to pick up ''Literature/TheCompleteRobot'' instead.
114** "Literature/TheSecretSense": The titular sense is the ability of the aliens from Mars to sense the amplitude and intensity of magnetic fields. Most Martians keep it secret because they want to avoid torturing the recently-met humans via SenseLossSadness.
115** "{{Literature/Segregationist}}": The main character is a surgeon who believes that [[ArtificialHybrid combining Metallos (robots) and humans]] is [[HalfBreedDiscrimination against the natural order of things]].
116** "Literature/StrangerInParadise": The end of the story gets very close to copying the title. It refers to the way Randall, an [[{{UsefulNotes/Autism}} autistic child]], finds happiness in [[BrainComputerInterface being used as the basis for a computer]] that operates a {{robot}} sent to {{UsefulNotes/Mercury}}. Randall's specific version of autism (which the story explicitly makes rare) has him feeling imperfectly built to interact with his environment, but by essentially building a body to the environment, they've created a paradise of stimulus for the boy.
117--->A stranger so long and so lost-- in paradise at last.
118** "Literature/UntoTheFourthGeneration": This story is about a young man, fresh from college, meeting his great-great-grandfather; four generations away. The main character is the first male descendant born in the new world.
119** "Literature/TheWateryPlace": The title refers to [[DoubleMeaningTitle two different places]] because Creator/IsaacAsimov was writing a {{Feghoot}} based on Venus/Venice. The 'foreigners' used "the [[VenusIsWet watery place]]" to refer to {{UsefulNotes/Venus}}. The sheriff thought "the [[CityOfCanals watery place]]" referred to {{UsefulNotes/Venice}}.
120** "Literature/TheWeaponTooDreadfulToUse": The title refers to a weapon that divorces the ability to think and reason from autonomic functions, such as swallowing, heart beats, and breathing. Antil, the one who rediscovered the weapon in [[AdvancedAncientAcropolis a ruin several thousand years old]], believes that rather than just lobotomizing a person, [[AndIMustScream the mind is still intact, but unable to control the body]].
121* ''Literature/TheBabySittersClub'': The title club is sometimes the only thing its members have in common.
122* "Literature/TheBeesFromBorneo", by Creator/WillHGray, refers to the breed of bees created by Silas Donaghy with red tufts on their tails.
123* "Literature/TheBotticelliHorror", by Creator/LloydBiggleJr, refers to the snail capable of mimicking anything shown to it, and often uses the shape of a woman in a shell, much like ''Art/TheBirthOfVenusBotticelli''.
124* ''Literature/BridgeToTerabithia'': The title "bridge" finally appears when Jesse builds it to replace the rope that he and Leslie used, [[spoiler: the breaking of which resulted in Leslie's DeathByNewberyMedal]].
125* ''Literature/ABrothersPrice'': The title seems metaphorical, after all, the "price" paid for something often is. However, it turns out that it is meant quite literal, it's the price to be paid to a man's sisters when he marries. It ''also'' appears physically, in all its glory of glittering gold coins.
126* Although Creator/LloydAlexander's ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfPrydain'' largely averts this, the final book, ''The High King'', plays it fairly straight. [[spoiler:It's not until the last three pages that it becomes revealed that the title refers to Taran, the series protagonist, being proclaimed High King of Prydain.]]
127* "Literature/TheDayIsDone", by Creator/LesterDelRey, is about the last Neanderthal Man. Hwoogh is the LastOfHisKind, and only two of the Cro-Magnon people even care as the day of Neanderthal Man is done.
128* ''Literature/TheEmpiriumTrilogy'': The series is named after the Empirium, the SentientCosmicForce that the world of Avitas is made out of.
129* "Literature/FlightOverXP637", by Creator/CraigSayre, refers to an accident that occurs to several reptilian aliens that are on Earth in disguise as ducks.
130* The title of "Literature/TheGameOfRatAndDragon", by Creator/CordwainerSmith, refers to a battle that humanity is fighting against an unknown enemy. Humans see this enemy as dragons, fierce and dangerous, capable of tearing apart a telepathic mind. Partners (telepathic descendants of cats) see this enemy as rats, nasty monsters that they can beat and kill.
131* ''Literature/HarryPotterAndThePrisonerOfAzkaban'': Chapter eight is entitled [[spoiler:Flight of the Fat Lady]]. This doesn't actually happen until the second-last page of the chapter. There's also a chapter titled "The Servant of Lord Voldemort". When you start the chapter, you think the title simply refers to [[spoiler:Sirius Black]]. By the time you've finished the chapter, it's become apparent that [[spoiler:the eponymous servant is Peter Pettigrew.]]
132* ''Literature/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy'''s ''So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish'' doesn't reveal its namesake until chapter 23. Although those who read the first book know that [[spoiler: it's the dolphins' last message to humankind, making the title itself a {{foreshadowing}} of their hand in Earth's restoration]].
133* "Literature/IntoTheDarkness" plays with the concept of namesake, because Darkness is the main character, but the meaning of the title isn't revealed until the very end of the story, when [[spoiler:Darkness describes dying as a journey into darkness]].
134* In "Literature/KidCardula", by Creator/JackRitchie, the titular Kid is a vampire trying to make some quick money as a boxer.
135* ''Literature/ALongWayDown'': A Creator/NickHornby {{Novel}} about four people planning to [[InterruptedSuicide jump off a building]], so it seems clear what the title means. Except that a line near the end twists what you think TheNamesake is; they ask whether they should jump, which would be the ''short way'', or take [[TitleDrop "the long way down"]], that is, ''taking the stairs back down'' and moving on with life, which is literally "the long way".
136* ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings: The Two Towers'': The second tower is revealed quite late in the book. Of course, ''which'' two towers is open to interpretation. While Tolkien stated in a letter to his publisher they were Orthanc and Barad-dûr, almost any combination of Orthanc with Barad-dûr, Minas Tirith, and Minas Morgul makes sense. (Orthanc is inevitable, as half the book consists of fighting Saruman.) On the other hand, there's the [[TrailersAlwaysSpoil inside blurb of the hardcover...]]
137* "[[Literature/TheManFromPIG The Man From P.I.G.]]", by Creator/HarryHarrison, is [[CovertGroupWithMundaneFront a pig farmer]] from [[GovernmentAgencyOfFiction Porcine Interstellar Guard]].
138* ''Literature/ANecklaceOfFallenStars'': The novel is named after "A Necklace of Fallen Stars", the final tale Kaela tells.
139* Creator/AnneMcCaffrey's "Literature/TheSmallestDragonboy": The titular character is Keevan, and also the youngest of the Impression Candidates.
140* In ''Literature/TheNameOfTheRose'', it's not made clear what the title refers to until the last page.
141* ''Literature/{{Underground}}'' refers to the underground fighting ring that doesn't show up until halfway through the book.
142* The Creator/BrandonSanderson novel ''Literature/{{Warbreaker}}'''s namesake is revealed on the last page.
143* The books in the second ''Literature/WarriorCats'' arc, ''[[Literature/WarriorCatsTheNewProphecy The New Prophecy]]'' are all named after times. In the first book, the chosen cats are told to go to the place where "the sun drowns" to "listen to what midnight tells them". At the end of the book, [[spoiler: they go into a cave to take shelter and get attacked by a badger. But the badger is actually named Midnight and she can talk cat. She then tells them that their forest will be destroyed and that they must find a new home.]]
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146[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
147* ''Crossed, Double-Crossed'' is a [[StoryWithinAStory book shown in an episode]] of the TV series ''Series/{{Charmed|1998}}''. Though the characters in the book [[ParanoiaFuel generally mistrust each other]], there isn't an actual betrayal until the end; when the main characters find themselves [[ThisIsGonnaSuck surrounded by bad guys]] and the book's narrator reveals TheNamesake by saying, "The couple knew they'd been double-crossed and there was no way out."
148* Although ''Series/DoctorWho'' is [[TitleDrop asked by many characters]] throughout the series, it has now become [[spoiler:the Final Question, and must never be asked during a specified CannotTellALie scenario, or else "Silence Will Fall" and the Doctor will be killed to prevent an ambiguously apocalyptic outcome]].
149** The title of the episode ''The Name of the Doctor'' was assumed to be taken literally; its real meaning is revealed at the end: [[spoiler: The Doctor's participation in The Time War was considered to be so awful that he did not refer to himself as The Doctor during it; therefore, it was not in the name of The Doctor.]]
150* The eponymous event in ''Series/TheEvent'' is not revealed until the final episode. Because the series is CutShort, it only really gets mentioned in passing and we never see it transpire.
151* Several ''Series/{{Lost}}'' episodes do this, such as "The Substitute," "Some Like it Hoth," and "Jughead." The flashbacks in "Not in Portland" depict Juliet being recruited for a job in Portland. At the very end, we learn this is actually how she was recruited by the Others. Richard tells her, "Well, actually, we're not quite in Portland."
152* It refers to TheVerse as a whole, but, during ''Series/CrisisOnInfiniteEarths2019'', [[spoiler:TheMultiverse is destroyed]], and the scant few survivors have to take on the OmnicidalManiac that caused it. [[spoiler:Oliver Queen, a.k.a. the [[Series/{{Arrow}} Green Arrow]] (who briefly gained godlike powers as ComicBook/TheSpectre) restored TheMultiverse upon the BigBad's defeat]], giving the term "''Series/{{Arrowverse}}''" a whole new meaning.
153* ''{{Series/Probe}}'''s "[[Recap/ProbeQuitIt Quit-It]]": The smoking cure that Baxton is producing is named "Quit-It" and Austin suspects that it may be used to {{Brainwash}} the adults in the neighborhood. {{Subverted|Trope}} because it isn't the drugs, [[spoiler:it's the music]].
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156[[folder:Magazine]]
157* ''{{Magazine/Analog}}'': In the [[Recap/Analog1939 October 1939 issue]], Creator/HaroldALower's nonfiction article, "Hunting Big Game", refers to the efforts taken to identify supernovae, the biggest explosions in the cosmos.
158[[/folder]]
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160[[folder:Podcasts]]
161* With the exception of ''[[Podcast/TheAdventureZoneDust Dust]]'' (named, according to Travis in the setup episode, for the phrase "ashes to ashes, dust to dust" to refer to the [[DarkerAndEdgier bleak and dark nature of the system he's using]]), the titles of ''Podcast/TheAdventureZone'' arcs don't become apparent until at least the end of the first arc. ''[[Podcast/TheAdventureZoneBalance Balance]]'' refers to the Bureau of Balance, which isn't named or even introduced until the first (and a halfth) arc, ''Moonlighting''. ''[[Podcast/TheAdventureZoneAmnesty Amnesty]]'' refers to the Amnesty lodge, the lodge out of which the Pine Guard is run, which doesn't become clear until an episode or two in. And ''[[Podcast/TheAdventureZoneCommitment Commitment]]'' refers to the commitment to [[spoiler:helping King Richard lead a peaceful coup against the [=US=] government]], which isn't introduced until the final episode of the arc.
162[[/folder]]
163
164[[folder:Video Games]]
165* ''Franchise/KingdomHearts'' is named for a mysterious location that's most accurately described as "The Heart (Core) of all worlds (Kingdoms)." though in the first installment it isn't even discussed until about 85% of the way in. Its sequel reveals it halfway in and the prequel talks about it just before the last area.
166* ''VideoGame/KingdomHeartsBirthBySleep'' might refer to two different things, [[spoiler: the literal birth of Vanitas or the figurative birth of Sora as a Keyblade Wielder, both of which happen when Ventus, one of the three protagonists, is asleep.]] Either way, both are revealed/happen when the game is nearing completion.
167* ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'':
168** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaLinksAwakening'' eventually reveals that the eponymous "awakening" is [[spoiler:Link having to wake up the Wind Fish in order to escape Koholint Island, which only exists in the Wind Fish's dream.]]
169** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTwilightPrincess'' plays with the trope. An early TitleDrop by Midna makes it appear that the second part of the title refers to Zelda herself, as the princess of a kingdom flooded with twilight. Only when the game is at least half finished is it revealed that [[spoiler:it's actually ''Midna'' who is the Twilight Princess, as the rightful heir to the invading twilight realm's ruling family]].
170** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaBreathOfTheWild'' initially seems to have that subtitle only as a poetic reference to the immensity of the WideOpenSandbox version of the game's AfterTheEnd Hyrule, as mentioned by Eiji Aonuma and Bill Trinen in interviews. Near the end, however, [[spoiler:the Divine Beasts, the AnimalMecha freed by Link throughout the game, all do a combined BreathWeapon attack on Calamity Ganon]], providing a more literal portrayal of the subtitle.
171* In ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft: Mists of Pandaria'', the Mists are in fact [[spoiler:the [[ElementalEmbodiment Sha]] of {{Pride}}.]]
172* The original ''VideoGame/GoldenSun'' duology for the Game Boy Advance at first appears to have little to do with the actual title. That is, until the ''very'' end of ''[[VideoGame/GoldenSunTheLostAge The Lost Age]]'', where it's revealed that the Golden Sun is [[spoiler: a mass of energy that rises above Mount Aleph when the four elemental lighthouses are lit and can bestow godlike power on anyone who bathes in its light.]]
173* The ''Franchise/DragonAge'' games play with this a little. They never actually ''talk'' about the eponymous Dragon Age, but codex entries in the game and supplemental material elsewhere clarify that it's how the game world marks time. Every hundred years is an age, and each new age is given a name inspired by significant events near the end of the previous one. Toward the end of the previous age, dragons began appearing in the world after they had long been thought extinct... so the games are all taking place during what has been named the Dragon Age.
174* For ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls'' series, the eponymous [[TomeOfEldritchLore Elder Scrolls]] don't actually appear in-game until the fourth game in the series, ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIVOblivion Oblivion]]'', and aren't directly involved with the main quest of a game until the fifth, ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Skyrim]]''. They are ''mentioned'' earlier, often as part of the impetus for the main quest, but are not actually seen. Fun fact: according to former series developer Ted Peterson, the name ''The Elder Scrolls'' was chosen as the surtitle to ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsArena Arena]]'' simply because "it sounded cool", and it wasn't determined until later in development what an "Elder Scroll" actually was in-universe.
175* In the ''Franchise/AceAttorney'' series, most case titles include a term relevant to that case, with the "Turnabout" added in. Most of the Turnabouts actually make sense instantly, but one case in particular, "Farewell, My Turnabout", would only be relevant at the end, in both the good and bad endings. In the good ending, [[spoiler:Phoenix ''has'' to find his client guilty, and thus [[BrokenWinLossStreak end his winning streak]] in the process.]] In the bad ending, [[spoiler:Phoenix shames himself for letting the guilty party get away (even if it means his sidekick [[IHaveYourWife would be spared]]) and disappears without a trace, feeling that he has disappointed his friends.]]
176* In the ''VideoGame/NeverwinterNights'' expansion ''NeverwinterNights/ShadowsOfUndrentide'', it takes until more than halfway through the Interlude between the first and second/final chapter before Undrentide is revealed to be a ruined city of the fallen empire of Netheril which the BigBad intends to [[FloatingContinent raise back into the sky]] and as the beginning of an EvilPlan to TakeOverTheWorld.
177* ''VideoGame/BornUnderTheRain'': It's a CharacterTitle. The name [[spoiler:Masika]] means "born under the rain".
178* ''VideoGame/HelensMysteriousCastle'': The titular castle is only called the Mysterious Castle by the Undead Knight when he and Helen meet in the first floor, after Helen has been traversing from her home on the sixth floor, down, and so this is the endgame.
179* ''VisualNovel/SpiritHunterNG'', unlike its predecessor ''VisualNovel/SpiritHunterDeathMark'', doesn't immediately make it clear what the subtitle refers to. Officially, it stands for No Good, which seems like a WordSaladTitle with no relation to the actual story. Then references to NG start popping up from the end of Chapter 2 onward, and it is gradually revealed to actually be [[spoiler:the Nagoshi no Gi, the ritual performed to seal away the BigBad Kakuya that Miroku failed to perform and that Akira must do in his place to defeat Kakuya]].
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181
182[[folder:Webcomics]]
183* ''[[http://www.pantheracomic.com Panthera]]'': The reason for the title isn't revealed until the 19th strip, which, [[WebcomicTime due to the comic being weekly]] and having [[ScheduleSlip missed an update]], meant that it was revealed after 6 months! Once it was, the author was quite verbal in pointing it out.
184[[/folder]]
185
186[[folder:WesternAnimation]]
187* The ''WesternAnimation/{{Archer}}'' episode "Vision Quest" initially seems to have a NonIndicativeName, since it's a BottleEpisode where the main characters are [[LockedInARoom trapped in an elevator.]] Until the very end, anyway, where Malory reveals that she was planning on having them all watch the film ''Vision Quest''.
188* ''WesternAnimation/TheHollow'': [[spoiler:"The Hollow" is the title of both the video game the kids are playing and the game show the characters are playing said game on]].
189[[/folder]]

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