For the up!, "Volkswagen" should really be acceptable.
There used to be a Plymouth Duster, and there is a Renault Duster.
Haima has, ahem, "borrowed" the M3 name for a car of its own. :-)
Similarly, Geely (and its now-defunct Gleagle subdivision) borrowed the Panda name.
And Jinbei borrowed the F50 name.
What I'm saying is, it might be difficult to do a test of this kind without running into homonyms. And the ones I've pointed out are just those that are mainstream cars in some part of the world; if we add some more esoteric vehicles there'll be more.
"Jenson" is misspelled. It's actually "Jensen".
For the up!, "Volkswagen" should really be acceptable.
There used to be a Plymouth Duster, and there is a Renault Duster.
Haima has, ahem, "borrowed" the M3 name for a car of its own. :-)
Similarly, Geely (and its now-defunct Gleagle subdivision) borrowed the Panda name.
And Jinbei borrowed the F50 name.
What I'm saying is, it might be difficult to do a test of this kind without running into homonyms. And the ones I've pointed out are just those that are mainstream cars in some part of the world; if we add some more esoteric vehicles there'll be more.