I'm wondering if there are any mathematical objects that were given a name when first discovered (and wildly used at their time), but then got renamed to match their characteristics later?
Counter examples:
- Imaginary number was coined by Descartes in the 17th century describing roots of polynomial involving $\sqrt{-1}$.
- I've seen some rename suggestions: lateral, orthogonal, perpendicular, vertical number. None of them replaced the original word, yet.
- Irrational number was coined by the school of Euclid around two thousand years ago to demonstrate the number that cannot be written as a ratio.
- Luckily(?), the word ratio ($a/b$) comes after rational (make sense). So irrational can have both meanings and, thus, does not need to be renamed(?).
Related examples:
- In terms of notation change, originally the equals sign was two vertical bars, then became two horizontal bars.