For some bloggers, a nom de plume might be used when the blogger's real name is phonetically unwieldy or so common as to be undistinguishable. |
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If you'd like to participate but can't use your real name please email me and we'll sort out a nom de plume. |
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If you don't want to use your real name, use a nom de plume and briefly explain, for publication, why you don't want to use your real name. |
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For one month in 2013, a British street artist known by the nom de plume of Banksy hypnotized the city of New York. |
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The inscription on his tombstone in Groombridge Church, where he is buried alongside his three children, bears his original name and no reference to his nom de plume. |
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First, he incorporated his nom de plume in order to protect the copyright on his books and extend his royalties. |
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Pierre Loti was the nom de plume of Julian Viaud, a young French midshipman who, in 1872, came upon a beauty named Rarahu bathing in a sylvan pool behind Papeete. |
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Nick de Plume is a nom de plume for 19-year old Harvard Student Nick Ciarelli, who's run the site for six years, and notched up an impressive record of scoops. |
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It is her maiden name that he eventually adopted as his nom de plume. |
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Not so with the stiff-upper-lipped unelected nobody who goes under the medieval, meaningless nom de plume of Black Rod. |
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Two-note motives are Ravel's musical nom de plume. |
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The writer adopted the initials after his nom de plume, Aeon, was once shortened accidentally through printer's devilry. |
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Van Doesburg took on a nom de plume, I. K. Bonset, a Dadaist poet. |
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Annie Winifred Ellerman, daughter of the UK's wealthiest man Sir John Ellerman, took the name Bryher as her nom de plume in the early 20th century. |
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The name could be a nom de plume but it could also be an accolade. |
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