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The phrase "a dignified name" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when referring to a name that conveys respect, honor, or seriousness.
Example: "The organization chose a dignified name to reflect its commitment to social justice and equality."
Alternatives: "a respectable name" or "an honorable name".
Exact(1)
"We wanted to give him a dignified name, so we decided on Moses".
Similar(59)
You couldn't ask for a more dignified farewell.
Pill had a more dignified name on her birth certificate, but everyone had more or less forgotten it.
Hotel lore says actor John Barrymore suggested the cat needed a more "dignified" name, so the cat was renamed "Hamlet".
He insisted on a change to the more dignified name Juno.
She is coming to Melbourne for treatment at the Theodore Institute, a place far less reputable than its dignified name suggests, and will be roosting in Helen's spare room.
Yet despite the more dignified name, parts of the neighborhood -- within the shadow of the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center -- have retained a blue-collar character.
I would also like to assure the people of Cleveland that I take no umbrage at the dignified name of their professional baseball team: the Indians.
I know, I know, this sounds hopelessly hippie-ish and "New Age," but what am I going to do? Jung gave this acausal connection between internal intention and external events the more dignified name of "synchronicity".
On 12 September, a dignified Catholic editor named Tadeusz Mazowiecki became prime minister.
The Everyman Bistro, Hope Street Up the hill and above the clamour of central scouseland is a tranquil, dignified thoroughfare named Hope Street, with a cathedral at either end and Georgian houses all around.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com