Wordnet 3.0
NOUN (1)
1.
a word introduced because an existing term has become inadequate;
- Example: "Nobody ever heard of analog clocks until digital clocks became common, so `analog clock' is a retronym"
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006):
retronym
n 1: a word introduced because an existing term has become
inadequate; "Nobody ever heard of analog clocks until
digital clocks became common, so `analog clock' is a
retronym"
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (30 December 2018):
retronym
A term invented to distinguish a subclass of things
from new members of the superclass, where the distinction was
previously not necessary, since the old subclass had been all
there was of the superclass.
For example, the retronyms "snail mail" and "paper mail"
were coined by those for who "mail" was likely to mean
electronic mail.
While the English language in general has a few retronyms
("whole milk", "snow skiing", "acoustic guitar"), hacker
jargon is necessarily (at points capriciously) rich in
retronyms, e.g. plaintext, natural language, impact
printer, eyeball search, biological virus.
[More examples?]
(2001-02-25)