Modulenotfounderror: No Module Named 'mpltoolkitsbasemap'

New York Post: AG Pam Bondi lists 300 bigwigs named in Epstein files — including Trump, Obamas, Clintons and Kamala Harris

Modulenotfounderror: No Module Named 'mpltoolkitsbasemap' 1

WASHINGTON — Attorney General Pam Bondi released a list of 300 politicians and prominent people who were named in the Jeffrey Epstein files, as she told Congress that all of the docs that the ...

AG Pam Bondi lists 300 bigwigs named in Epstein files — including Trump, Obamas, Clintons and Kamala Harris

Modulenotfounderror: No Module Named 'mpltoolkitsbasemap' 3

New York Post: All the A-listers named in the newly unsealed Jeffrey Epstein documents

Clearly "named after" means something along the lines of "These drawings are by Smith after those of Jones" where the "after" meaning "following as a consequence", so understood to mean "in honour of". The American "named for" is clearly in the sense that I do something "for" you, ie as a gift, so if I named something after someone, it would be as a gift "for" them, so it was named "for" them ...

Modulenotfounderror: No Module Named 'mpltoolkitsbasemap' 5

american english - "Named for" vs. "named after" - English Language ...

Over on Stackoverflow, I keep seeing questions wherein posters say: *I have an item named SoAndSo (a table, a file, etc.). Shouldn't it be: *I have an item called SoAndSo. Is "named" an accepta...

The 1964 Walt Disney film Mary Poppins features the following famous lines: Bert: I know a man with a wooden leg named Smith. Uncle Albert: What's the name of his other leg? It is a joke that

Modulenotfounderror: No Module Named 'mpltoolkitsbasemap' 8

grammar - "I know a man with a wooden leg named Smith" - English ...

However, termed is much more formal and is often used to describe very specific concepts in multiple different fields. named, on the other hand, is a bit less formal and thus, much less restrictive than termed.

Modulenotfounderror: No Module Named 'mpltoolkitsbasemap' 10