Why this word is great
APTRONYM — [Noun] A name that is aptly suited to its owner, often coincidentally matching their profession or personality. A blend of apt ("suited") and -onym ("name"), modeled after patronym ("name derived from a father"), it is the linguistic equivalent of serendipity. Unlike "inaptronym" (a name that clashes with its bearer) or "misnomer" (a broadly incorrect label), an aptronym is a quiet wink of fate. It is the dentist named Dr. Payne, the florist called Mrs. Bloom, or the somber poet Sylvia Plath—whose surname, from the Old English plætt ("flat, open land"), seems to echo the stark expanse of her verse. The world, for a moment, feels improbably ordered, as if names were prophecies waiting to be fulfilled.