Did I just read this whole thing and not see the Chevy Nova mentioned? The story that it wasn't marketed as such in Spanish-speaking countries is as old as the hills and completely wrong, but it keeps popping up. I've been on a Chevy Nova mailing list for what seems like centuries (well, only parts of 2 of 'em) and some FNG comes on the list about every other month and starts off with putting his foot in his mouth by stating such. For those who don't know, the incorrect notion that "Nova" means "doesn't go" is like the stories of the Loch Ness Monster and Bigfoot, the yeti.
I'm very partial to Chevrolets (like KnightFan, although I only feel saddened
by their abandonment of the RWD platform and recycling of names to insipid front-driver tuna cans...not actively resentful
) and I miss the day when BelAir, Biscayne and Impala meant something...although I never totally understood the naming of station wagons: Brookwood, Kingswood, Driftwood, Firewood, Wormwood...etc. The only cars they've left unmolested are the Camaro and Corvette...although they tried real hard to kill 'em both off in the 70s and early 70s.
The car I had trouble (and still do) comprehending the naming convention on is Studebaker. It was ok when Champion meant 6-cylinder and Commander meant 8, but then there was a Dictator in there (who didn't survive the war) and then they started adding sub-models: "Studebaker Champion Regal Starliner" and "Studebaker Commander Regal Starlight Coupe" and "Studebaker Commander State Starliner Coupe". More than once I've imagined a new salesman coming to work and being handed a 4-pound book of model and sub-model names and hearing, "we'll have a test on this tomorrow morning" whereupon he either goes home and shoots himself in despair or applies for a job in ladies' lingerie at Montgomery Wards the next morning.
But if ya really wanna go nuts, there's Packard. Year, Series, Chassis, Body, (all numbers), then the Model and perhaps coachbuilder's name. I asked a friend what the ID was on his 33 straight-8 rumble-seat roadster and he said, "I'll have to go home and look it up." LOL! And this is a sharp guy! He emailed me later to tell me that it was a Tenth Series 1933 Packard 1004 659 Super Eight Coupe Roadster by Deitrich. Maybe the suicides of salesmen started in the 30s, rather than the 50s.
What's in a name? More than meets the eye, apparently.
RtR