What does ULTRON stand for?












17















Like "Just A Rather Very Intelligent System (J.A.R.V.I.S. )", does U.L.T.R.O.N stand for something in comics or movies in Marvel Cinematic Universe?










share|improve this question





























    17















    Like "Just A Rather Very Intelligent System (J.A.R.V.I.S. )", does U.L.T.R.O.N stand for something in comics or movies in Marvel Cinematic Universe?










    share|improve this question



























      17












      17








      17


      1






      Like "Just A Rather Very Intelligent System (J.A.R.V.I.S. )", does U.L.T.R.O.N stand for something in comics or movies in Marvel Cinematic Universe?










      share|improve this question
















      Like "Just A Rather Very Intelligent System (J.A.R.V.I.S. )", does U.L.T.R.O.N stand for something in comics or movies in Marvel Cinematic Universe?







      character marvel-cinematic-universe avengers-age-of-ultron






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      share|improve this question




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      edited Jan 4 at 9:45









      Ankit Sharma

      73.6k62386595




      73.6k62386595










      asked Jan 4 at 8:04









      Surya TejSurya Tej

      871425




      871425






















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          34














          Out-of-universe - it's a name, rather than an acronym.



          A mix of 'Ultroids' and 'tron'





          In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Roy Thomas, who co-created Ultron, answered:




          Where did the idea for Ultron come from?



          I never considered myself very good at making up names. Some of the first creatures I made up fighting The Avengers were part of a group called the Ultroids. I've always liked that tron ending. I had recently made up something called a psychlotron [a brainwashing device]. So I liked that tron ending, and Ultron just came as a good name.







          share|improve this answer





















          • 13





            With a lack of in-universe information, I've given an alternative answer that at least answers it from one point of view. Ultron doesn't stand for anything - it's a name. It stands to reason that in-universe it is therefore also just a name, rather than an acronym.

            – Longshanks
            Jan 4 at 13:57






          • 2





            I agree this could be reworded to act like a direct answer. The citation is valuable and shows the intent of the name even if not in-universe.

            – JPhi1618
            Jan 4 at 14:37






          • 1





            Do NOT confuse "psychlotron" with "cyclotron".

            – Jesse C. Slicer
            Jan 4 at 19:53



















          11














          It's not an acronym.



          Name "Ultron" actually came from the ancient times:




          The inspiration behind the name "Ultron" actually came from the Roman
          god of war Mars whose full name (in terms of the version chosen for
          Ultron's inspiration, at least) is "Mars Ultor". The literal
          translation of Mars Ultor is actually "Mars the Avenger", which
          essentially means that Ultron's name is a derivative of the word
          "Avenger" - the name of the team to whom he has been a robotic thorn
          in the side for many a year since his first appearance. Mars Ultor is
          also the name of a cult of Mars' followers, which is also interesting
          given that Ultron has his own cult of followers - the "Sons of Yinsen" - in the Marvel comic books.







          share|improve this answer





















          • 7





            @Anu7 Please quote and cite your sources when not using your own words. Thanks

            – Lightness Races in Orbit
            Jan 4 at 13:24






          • 16





            Even though it's likely true that the name doesn't stand for anything, saying the name would have to be written as "U.L.T.R.O.N" is wrong. Acronyms do not have to be written in uppercase with dots between letters. They can still 'stand for something' if they are written in lowercase without dots.

            – kapex
            Jan 4 at 14:21








          • 15





            NASA stands for National Aeronautics and Space Administration, so not having dots does not prove it's not an acronym. - And most people don't even know that LASER is an acronym (Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation) because there are no dots.

            – Oliver_C
            Jan 4 at 16:20








          • 8





            Scuba is written in normal case and no dots though it stands for Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus.

            – Jesse C. Slicer
            Jan 4 at 19:54






          • 6





            @VerNick I don't,but given that Roy's name is associated with another interview on the site in 2016, and another in 2018, it seems unlikely that the real Roy wouldn't object to the article if it wasn't genuine. All I'm saying is that the author of your article hasn't cited where they found their facts (comic number, author interview, personal opinion etc.), which IMO lessens the credibility of the answer.

            – Longshanks
            Jan 5 at 14:13



















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes








          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          34














          Out-of-universe - it's a name, rather than an acronym.



          A mix of 'Ultroids' and 'tron'





          In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Roy Thomas, who co-created Ultron, answered:




          Where did the idea for Ultron come from?



          I never considered myself very good at making up names. Some of the first creatures I made up fighting The Avengers were part of a group called the Ultroids. I've always liked that tron ending. I had recently made up something called a psychlotron [a brainwashing device]. So I liked that tron ending, and Ultron just came as a good name.







          share|improve this answer





















          • 13





            With a lack of in-universe information, I've given an alternative answer that at least answers it from one point of view. Ultron doesn't stand for anything - it's a name. It stands to reason that in-universe it is therefore also just a name, rather than an acronym.

            – Longshanks
            Jan 4 at 13:57






          • 2





            I agree this could be reworded to act like a direct answer. The citation is valuable and shows the intent of the name even if not in-universe.

            – JPhi1618
            Jan 4 at 14:37






          • 1





            Do NOT confuse "psychlotron" with "cyclotron".

            – Jesse C. Slicer
            Jan 4 at 19:53
















          34














          Out-of-universe - it's a name, rather than an acronym.



          A mix of 'Ultroids' and 'tron'





          In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Roy Thomas, who co-created Ultron, answered:




          Where did the idea for Ultron come from?



          I never considered myself very good at making up names. Some of the first creatures I made up fighting The Avengers were part of a group called the Ultroids. I've always liked that tron ending. I had recently made up something called a psychlotron [a brainwashing device]. So I liked that tron ending, and Ultron just came as a good name.







          share|improve this answer





















          • 13





            With a lack of in-universe information, I've given an alternative answer that at least answers it from one point of view. Ultron doesn't stand for anything - it's a name. It stands to reason that in-universe it is therefore also just a name, rather than an acronym.

            – Longshanks
            Jan 4 at 13:57






          • 2





            I agree this could be reworded to act like a direct answer. The citation is valuable and shows the intent of the name even if not in-universe.

            – JPhi1618
            Jan 4 at 14:37






          • 1





            Do NOT confuse "psychlotron" with "cyclotron".

            – Jesse C. Slicer
            Jan 4 at 19:53














          34












          34








          34







          Out-of-universe - it's a name, rather than an acronym.



          A mix of 'Ultroids' and 'tron'





          In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Roy Thomas, who co-created Ultron, answered:




          Where did the idea for Ultron come from?



          I never considered myself very good at making up names. Some of the first creatures I made up fighting The Avengers were part of a group called the Ultroids. I've always liked that tron ending. I had recently made up something called a psychlotron [a brainwashing device]. So I liked that tron ending, and Ultron just came as a good name.







          share|improve this answer















          Out-of-universe - it's a name, rather than an acronym.



          A mix of 'Ultroids' and 'tron'





          In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Roy Thomas, who co-created Ultron, answered:




          Where did the idea for Ultron come from?



          I never considered myself very good at making up names. Some of the first creatures I made up fighting The Avengers were part of a group called the Ultroids. I've always liked that tron ending. I had recently made up something called a psychlotron [a brainwashing device]. So I liked that tron ending, and Ultron just came as a good name.








          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Jan 4 at 14:34

























          answered Jan 4 at 12:30









          LongshanksLongshanks

          3,27521136




          3,27521136








          • 13





            With a lack of in-universe information, I've given an alternative answer that at least answers it from one point of view. Ultron doesn't stand for anything - it's a name. It stands to reason that in-universe it is therefore also just a name, rather than an acronym.

            – Longshanks
            Jan 4 at 13:57






          • 2





            I agree this could be reworded to act like a direct answer. The citation is valuable and shows the intent of the name even if not in-universe.

            – JPhi1618
            Jan 4 at 14:37






          • 1





            Do NOT confuse "psychlotron" with "cyclotron".

            – Jesse C. Slicer
            Jan 4 at 19:53














          • 13





            With a lack of in-universe information, I've given an alternative answer that at least answers it from one point of view. Ultron doesn't stand for anything - it's a name. It stands to reason that in-universe it is therefore also just a name, rather than an acronym.

            – Longshanks
            Jan 4 at 13:57






          • 2





            I agree this could be reworded to act like a direct answer. The citation is valuable and shows the intent of the name even if not in-universe.

            – JPhi1618
            Jan 4 at 14:37






          • 1





            Do NOT confuse "psychlotron" with "cyclotron".

            – Jesse C. Slicer
            Jan 4 at 19:53








          13




          13





          With a lack of in-universe information, I've given an alternative answer that at least answers it from one point of view. Ultron doesn't stand for anything - it's a name. It stands to reason that in-universe it is therefore also just a name, rather than an acronym.

          – Longshanks
          Jan 4 at 13:57





          With a lack of in-universe information, I've given an alternative answer that at least answers it from one point of view. Ultron doesn't stand for anything - it's a name. It stands to reason that in-universe it is therefore also just a name, rather than an acronym.

          – Longshanks
          Jan 4 at 13:57




          2




          2





          I agree this could be reworded to act like a direct answer. The citation is valuable and shows the intent of the name even if not in-universe.

          – JPhi1618
          Jan 4 at 14:37





          I agree this could be reworded to act like a direct answer. The citation is valuable and shows the intent of the name even if not in-universe.

          – JPhi1618
          Jan 4 at 14:37




          1




          1





          Do NOT confuse "psychlotron" with "cyclotron".

          – Jesse C. Slicer
          Jan 4 at 19:53





          Do NOT confuse "psychlotron" with "cyclotron".

          – Jesse C. Slicer
          Jan 4 at 19:53











          11














          It's not an acronym.



          Name "Ultron" actually came from the ancient times:




          The inspiration behind the name "Ultron" actually came from the Roman
          god of war Mars whose full name (in terms of the version chosen for
          Ultron's inspiration, at least) is "Mars Ultor". The literal
          translation of Mars Ultor is actually "Mars the Avenger", which
          essentially means that Ultron's name is a derivative of the word
          "Avenger" - the name of the team to whom he has been a robotic thorn
          in the side for many a year since his first appearance. Mars Ultor is
          also the name of a cult of Mars' followers, which is also interesting
          given that Ultron has his own cult of followers - the "Sons of Yinsen" - in the Marvel comic books.







          share|improve this answer





















          • 7





            @Anu7 Please quote and cite your sources when not using your own words. Thanks

            – Lightness Races in Orbit
            Jan 4 at 13:24






          • 16





            Even though it's likely true that the name doesn't stand for anything, saying the name would have to be written as "U.L.T.R.O.N" is wrong. Acronyms do not have to be written in uppercase with dots between letters. They can still 'stand for something' if they are written in lowercase without dots.

            – kapex
            Jan 4 at 14:21








          • 15





            NASA stands for National Aeronautics and Space Administration, so not having dots does not prove it's not an acronym. - And most people don't even know that LASER is an acronym (Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation) because there are no dots.

            – Oliver_C
            Jan 4 at 16:20








          • 8





            Scuba is written in normal case and no dots though it stands for Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus.

            – Jesse C. Slicer
            Jan 4 at 19:54






          • 6





            @VerNick I don't,but given that Roy's name is associated with another interview on the site in 2016, and another in 2018, it seems unlikely that the real Roy wouldn't object to the article if it wasn't genuine. All I'm saying is that the author of your article hasn't cited where they found their facts (comic number, author interview, personal opinion etc.), which IMO lessens the credibility of the answer.

            – Longshanks
            Jan 5 at 14:13
















          11














          It's not an acronym.



          Name "Ultron" actually came from the ancient times:




          The inspiration behind the name "Ultron" actually came from the Roman
          god of war Mars whose full name (in terms of the version chosen for
          Ultron's inspiration, at least) is "Mars Ultor". The literal
          translation of Mars Ultor is actually "Mars the Avenger", which
          essentially means that Ultron's name is a derivative of the word
          "Avenger" - the name of the team to whom he has been a robotic thorn
          in the side for many a year since his first appearance. Mars Ultor is
          also the name of a cult of Mars' followers, which is also interesting
          given that Ultron has his own cult of followers - the "Sons of Yinsen" - in the Marvel comic books.







          share|improve this answer





















          • 7





            @Anu7 Please quote and cite your sources when not using your own words. Thanks

            – Lightness Races in Orbit
            Jan 4 at 13:24






          • 16





            Even though it's likely true that the name doesn't stand for anything, saying the name would have to be written as "U.L.T.R.O.N" is wrong. Acronyms do not have to be written in uppercase with dots between letters. They can still 'stand for something' if they are written in lowercase without dots.

            – kapex
            Jan 4 at 14:21








          • 15





            NASA stands for National Aeronautics and Space Administration, so not having dots does not prove it's not an acronym. - And most people don't even know that LASER is an acronym (Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation) because there are no dots.

            – Oliver_C
            Jan 4 at 16:20








          • 8





            Scuba is written in normal case and no dots though it stands for Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus.

            – Jesse C. Slicer
            Jan 4 at 19:54






          • 6





            @VerNick I don't,but given that Roy's name is associated with another interview on the site in 2016, and another in 2018, it seems unlikely that the real Roy wouldn't object to the article if it wasn't genuine. All I'm saying is that the author of your article hasn't cited where they found their facts (comic number, author interview, personal opinion etc.), which IMO lessens the credibility of the answer.

            – Longshanks
            Jan 5 at 14:13














          11












          11








          11







          It's not an acronym.



          Name "Ultron" actually came from the ancient times:




          The inspiration behind the name "Ultron" actually came from the Roman
          god of war Mars whose full name (in terms of the version chosen for
          Ultron's inspiration, at least) is "Mars Ultor". The literal
          translation of Mars Ultor is actually "Mars the Avenger", which
          essentially means that Ultron's name is a derivative of the word
          "Avenger" - the name of the team to whom he has been a robotic thorn
          in the side for many a year since his first appearance. Mars Ultor is
          also the name of a cult of Mars' followers, which is also interesting
          given that Ultron has his own cult of followers - the "Sons of Yinsen" - in the Marvel comic books.







          share|improve this answer















          It's not an acronym.



          Name "Ultron" actually came from the ancient times:




          The inspiration behind the name "Ultron" actually came from the Roman
          god of war Mars whose full name (in terms of the version chosen for
          Ultron's inspiration, at least) is "Mars Ultor". The literal
          translation of Mars Ultor is actually "Mars the Avenger", which
          essentially means that Ultron's name is a derivative of the word
          "Avenger" - the name of the team to whom he has been a robotic thorn
          in the side for many a year since his first appearance. Mars Ultor is
          also the name of a cult of Mars' followers, which is also interesting
          given that Ultron has his own cult of followers - the "Sons of Yinsen" - in the Marvel comic books.








          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Jan 5 at 15:53

























          answered Jan 4 at 9:20









          Ver NickVer Nick

          1




          1








          • 7





            @Anu7 Please quote and cite your sources when not using your own words. Thanks

            – Lightness Races in Orbit
            Jan 4 at 13:24






          • 16





            Even though it's likely true that the name doesn't stand for anything, saying the name would have to be written as "U.L.T.R.O.N" is wrong. Acronyms do not have to be written in uppercase with dots between letters. They can still 'stand for something' if they are written in lowercase without dots.

            – kapex
            Jan 4 at 14:21








          • 15





            NASA stands for National Aeronautics and Space Administration, so not having dots does not prove it's not an acronym. - And most people don't even know that LASER is an acronym (Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation) because there are no dots.

            – Oliver_C
            Jan 4 at 16:20








          • 8





            Scuba is written in normal case and no dots though it stands for Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus.

            – Jesse C. Slicer
            Jan 4 at 19:54






          • 6





            @VerNick I don't,but given that Roy's name is associated with another interview on the site in 2016, and another in 2018, it seems unlikely that the real Roy wouldn't object to the article if it wasn't genuine. All I'm saying is that the author of your article hasn't cited where they found their facts (comic number, author interview, personal opinion etc.), which IMO lessens the credibility of the answer.

            – Longshanks
            Jan 5 at 14:13














          • 7





            @Anu7 Please quote and cite your sources when not using your own words. Thanks

            – Lightness Races in Orbit
            Jan 4 at 13:24






          • 16





            Even though it's likely true that the name doesn't stand for anything, saying the name would have to be written as "U.L.T.R.O.N" is wrong. Acronyms do not have to be written in uppercase with dots between letters. They can still 'stand for something' if they are written in lowercase without dots.

            – kapex
            Jan 4 at 14:21








          • 15





            NASA stands for National Aeronautics and Space Administration, so not having dots does not prove it's not an acronym. - And most people don't even know that LASER is an acronym (Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation) because there are no dots.

            – Oliver_C
            Jan 4 at 16:20








          • 8





            Scuba is written in normal case and no dots though it stands for Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus.

            – Jesse C. Slicer
            Jan 4 at 19:54






          • 6





            @VerNick I don't,but given that Roy's name is associated with another interview on the site in 2016, and another in 2018, it seems unlikely that the real Roy wouldn't object to the article if it wasn't genuine. All I'm saying is that the author of your article hasn't cited where they found their facts (comic number, author interview, personal opinion etc.), which IMO lessens the credibility of the answer.

            – Longshanks
            Jan 5 at 14:13








          7




          7





          @Anu7 Please quote and cite your sources when not using your own words. Thanks

          – Lightness Races in Orbit
          Jan 4 at 13:24





          @Anu7 Please quote and cite your sources when not using your own words. Thanks

          – Lightness Races in Orbit
          Jan 4 at 13:24




          16




          16





          Even though it's likely true that the name doesn't stand for anything, saying the name would have to be written as "U.L.T.R.O.N" is wrong. Acronyms do not have to be written in uppercase with dots between letters. They can still 'stand for something' if they are written in lowercase without dots.

          – kapex
          Jan 4 at 14:21







          Even though it's likely true that the name doesn't stand for anything, saying the name would have to be written as "U.L.T.R.O.N" is wrong. Acronyms do not have to be written in uppercase with dots between letters. They can still 'stand for something' if they are written in lowercase without dots.

          – kapex
          Jan 4 at 14:21






          15




          15





          NASA stands for National Aeronautics and Space Administration, so not having dots does not prove it's not an acronym. - And most people don't even know that LASER is an acronym (Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation) because there are no dots.

          – Oliver_C
          Jan 4 at 16:20







          NASA stands for National Aeronautics and Space Administration, so not having dots does not prove it's not an acronym. - And most people don't even know that LASER is an acronym (Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation) because there are no dots.

          – Oliver_C
          Jan 4 at 16:20






          8




          8





          Scuba is written in normal case and no dots though it stands for Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus.

          – Jesse C. Slicer
          Jan 4 at 19:54





          Scuba is written in normal case and no dots though it stands for Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus.

          – Jesse C. Slicer
          Jan 4 at 19:54




          6




          6





          @VerNick I don't,but given that Roy's name is associated with another interview on the site in 2016, and another in 2018, it seems unlikely that the real Roy wouldn't object to the article if it wasn't genuine. All I'm saying is that the author of your article hasn't cited where they found their facts (comic number, author interview, personal opinion etc.), which IMO lessens the credibility of the answer.

          – Longshanks
          Jan 5 at 14:13





          @VerNick I don't,but given that Roy's name is associated with another interview on the site in 2016, and another in 2018, it seems unlikely that the real Roy wouldn't object to the article if it wasn't genuine. All I'm saying is that the author of your article hasn't cited where they found their facts (comic number, author interview, personal opinion etc.), which IMO lessens the credibility of the answer.

          – Longshanks
          Jan 5 at 14:13



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