nom de plume

NOUN
  1. an author's pseudonym
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How To Use nom de plume In A Sentence

  • In fact, Baroness Staffe wasn't an aristocrat at all but plain Blanche Soyer, a product of the middle classes, who had assumed the title as her nom de plume. A Nation Holding Out for a Hero
  • Perhaps as accurate a statement as any, of my opinions, was made by George Alfred Townsend, over his _nom de plume_ of "Gath," in the New York "Graphic" of April 12, 1878. Recollections of Forty Years in the House, Senate and Cabinet An Autobiography.
  • Born in Austria in the mid-'70s, he's been working under a collective of nom de plumes to add to his eldritch bearing. Phil Ramone and Danielle Evin: Dog Ears Music: Volume 160
  • I do believe that the Minister of Education using a nom de plume is very passe, especially when writing such crap. Kelvin Mackenzie says “yes” « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • Then I go carefully over the columns of the weekly, clip out all the available personals and news items, about weddings, and engagements, and teas, etc., hash them up in epistolary style, forge the Windsor correspondent's nom de plume – and there's your society letter! The Alpine Path: The Story of My Career
  • The gallery, which is free to the public, was established by the late Korean businessman Yoo Sung Yeon in 1989 and named after his nom de plume, Song Eun, which means 'hidden pine tree' in Korean.
  • 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.
  • 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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