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View definitions for moniker

moniker

noun as in nickname

Strongest matches

Weak match

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Example Sentences

The school’s new moniker garnered praise from Harry Belafonte, a fellow Hollywood legend and longtime friend of Poitier.

She earned the name “Trash Queen” while completing her Harvard thesis on solid waste management, a moniker she wears with pride.

From Ozy

There’s something about being able to shed all the monikers we parents have all had to take on this year for just an hour, where I get to focus completely on myself, or at least, not hurting myself, and re-experience something I loved.

Antifa is a moniker, not a single group with a clear organizational structure or leader, and no cases could be found in which someone who self-identifies as antifa led violent acts at protests across the country.

The Cleveland team, which has moved away from its cartoonish tribal chief logo and had earlier announced plans to reconsider its moniker, didn’t immediately comment to the Times.

From Fortune

“Tu eres como chuleria en pote,” goes the Puerto Rican expression that gave rise to his moniker.

The years between 26 and 34 are rife with those kinds of life changes so heavy they earn moniker of “milestones.”

He called the AEI president “the spiritual leader of the capitalist people,” a moniker that Brooks embraces.

Since The Great White Way was given that strange moniker in 1890, the majority of actors have also bore a pasty complexion.

It was intoxicating and thrilling and for the first time, the show felt worthy of its Marvel moniker.

They were to ask for the householder's 'straight moniker'—Mr. Merston.

This laconic epitome of a gigantic event had crystallized into a moniker for Carson, and he became solely "Death-on-the-trail."

So good an artist should put his "moniker" on his productions.

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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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