[
UK
/mˈɒnɪkɐ/
]
[ US /ˈmɑnɪkɝ/ ]
[ US /ˈmɑnɪkɝ/ ]
NOUN
-
a familiar name for a person (often a shortened version of a person's given name)
Henry's nickname was Slim
Joe's mother would not use his nickname and always called him Joseph
How To Use moniker In A Sentence
- Stated income loans only deserve the moniker "liar loans" because they were abused by banks and given to borrowers who lacked the income to qualify full doc. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
- Argo to seek the Golden Fleece; their moniker combines the name of their ship and the Greek word "nautēs," meaning "sailor. Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day
- Learning the motivation behind his mask and moniker is the tip of the iceberg in a story spanning the globe from the United Kingdom to war-torn Afghanistan to the drug war in Mexico. Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 Comic Book | My[confined]Space
- Moondog is the ethereal moniker by which the Fifties Manhattan street musician Louis Hardin was known.
- Save for the occasional inspired moniker, they tend to be humdrum offerings.
- Your Wrong, tumbo tells it as it is, Old Yank has a voice, as does all on ESB, get back to your real moniker arsehole! East Side Boxing
- Static information called a moniker is embedded in the device, and a generic device handler software is installed on the computer.
- The choice to invert his moniker is a perplexing one.
- As the Cold War dawned, American Communists, who were still a formidable force, sought a rebirth by christening themselves "Progressives," a moniker usurped from the reform movement of the Teddy Roosevelt era. Obama a 'Reaganite'? It Just Might Work
- KYLIE'S model fella has her moniker inked below his hip as a sign of his commitment Salman has an alluring ex-wife Undefined