Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Yet even today his name is hardly a household word.
And they did it four years ago, when Internet was far from a household word.
"Only that this name is a household word in society."
Little seen in movies, her name did not become a household word.
Yet he has never been - for want of a better term - a household word.
Leopold may be less than a household word to many Americans, perhaps most.
However, the center's work has not exactly become a household word, she added, and the need for volunteers is growing.
You'll be a household word in six months, and after that, the sky is the limit.
And your name is a household word to hundreds of people."
She said the owner was a famous actor, a household word more or less.
Climate change and global warming became household words in the 2000s.
Yet the Internet was on its way to becoming a household word, and all the major technology companies feared being left behind.
He was hardly a household word among the pregnant women of Boston.
It is not a household word that we used.
He would've become a household word, coming in like that and winning the game."
The opposition has not produced a single contender whose name is a household word.
This commercial, which ran for several years in many markets, made blender a household word.
He later wrote about the school and his experience there in Household Words.
If these are not yet household words, they soon will be, given the growing popularity of African designs for the home.
Hard to pronounce and remember, the name isn't likely to become a household word.
His name, it seems, was a household word throughout all England for every sort of mischief.
And then, one after the other, appeared the two books that made his name a household word in Trinidad.
For decades Xerox's brand name has been a household word.
My name's already beginning to be known in the California design community, and some day it'll be a household word.
Now free, he is becoming almost a household word in Israel and the occupied territories.