I think the most interesting member of our crew, however, was our gray and grizzled translator, who goes by the nom de guerre of Jdhooshi. |
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Each is given his own nom de guerre and warned not to tell anybody what he has learned. |
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Those using an Arabic nom de guerre should at least use the name properly rendered in Anglicized form. |
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Like many other aristocrats, he serves the revolutionary cause, using the nom de guerre of Louis Sade. |
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That career lasted a year, and Hodgson appeared in five public fights under the nom de guerre Mad Dog Madison. |
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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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And there are few things in life as satisfying as sitting in the park enjoying nom noms from a French bakery. |
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It sounds like you're going to have a fine selection of nom noms in your fridge. |
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Delicious nom noms were shared, picnic-style, in the green and grassy interior of Grosvenor Square. |
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You'll be doing High Fives all day long after experiencing the awesome service, great atmosphere and tasty nom noms. |
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He staged moody still lifes composed of nom noms that pop stars enjoy snacking on backstage. |
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It gets a bit crowded as the night carries on, but great for drinks and nom nom after work. |
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Sadly, however, this turned out to be only a nom de guerre for a French agent called Albert Guerisse. |
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His nom de guerre was bestowed because it's said he can dance like Michael Jackson. |
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Back then she went by her nom de guerre, Bruna Surfistinha, or Bruna the Surfer Girl. |
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And I always remember that when they were in the Resistance, they had secret code names, a nom de guerre. |
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One member of our group, an adventurous type who preferred the nom de guerre, Cheeko, injured himself sliding down a wooden bannister. |
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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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His only previous Oscar nom came in the best actor category 28 years ago for Witness. |
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Not only did Judi Dench score a nom for best actress, but the film earned screenplay, score and a best-pic slots as well. |
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I waited for three months and went to Mr. Fowler again, heralding my arrival with a card bearing both my name and my nom de guerre. |
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He earned another nom for executive producing the 1992 CBS miniseries Sinatra. |
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She's telling her who they should nom and wants it to be 2 real targets on both sides so they don't have to worry about the votes. |
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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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A former military man, Molina had served under Rios Montt, reportedly under the nom de guerre Major Tito. |
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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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A smaller portion of their literature was written in chu nom, a writing system that uses a combination of Chinese characters to transcribe Vietnamese sounds. |
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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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It is her maiden name that he eventually adopted as his nom de plume. |
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It is headed by another shadowy figure using the nom de guerre Abu Muhammad al Golani. |
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Meanwhile, I shall find solace in this tasty pie om nom nom. |
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It was under this nom de plume that Hesse had, since 1917, been publishing his admonitory journalistic writings attacking the war. |
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Under the nom de guerre of Actress, Cunningham makes what seems, on the surface, to be fragmentary, abrasive techno music. |
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A month-long siege there led to the death of top rebel commander, Youssef al-Jader, who used the nom de guerre Abu Furat. |
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But Steinitz had particularly stern words for Abbas, whom he referred to by his nom de guerre, Abu Mazen. |
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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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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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Shamir even used Michael as his nom de guerre, after Michael Collins. |
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Two-note motives are Ravel's musical nom de plume. |
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Under nom deplume, 'Yusuf MD,' he is a poet and writer who has been involved in literary endeavors since his schooldays. |
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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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He delegated speechmaking duties to Magomed Daudov, a former rebel fighter who switched to Moscow's side in 2004 and is still known by his nom de guerre, Lord. |
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Honegger takes up his pen, notably to compose Prelude, arioso, fughette sur le nom BACH and the Mouvement symphonique N° 3 which, lacking another name, never obtains the success of Pacific or Rugby. |
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Van Doesburg took on a nom de plume, I. K. Bonset, a Dadaist poet. |
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The director of the media operational committee was known by the nom de guerre Abu Reuter-an obvious reference to the famous global news wire service. |
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A former RUC Special Branch officer-turned-author under the nom de plume Alan Barker told me that his undercover unit in Derry could not believe the news that the IRA had shot Flood. |
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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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A la medina de Rabat, se trouve un coin typique, connu sous le nom de Souk Sebat, marche des chaussures. |
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A Vietnamese script called Chu nom used modified Chinese characters to express the Vietnamese language. |
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Then we have people who use a nom de clavier, but whose real names are known to many of us. |
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We are smitten with Nemo Wolfe. That's the charming nom de Web of Mercantile Library executive director Albert Pyle when he posts on their delightfully omnivorous blog. |
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The name could be a nom de plume but it could also be an accolade. |
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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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Nom Nom Nom! We stopped in the meatball joint for a late dinner the other night and had a great time. |
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In appropriate situational contexts, Penguin may allow for multiple concurrent topicalizations, promoting two or more objects to morphological NOM status. |
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Raiffeisen-Holding Group, which first invested in the UK in 2008, dismissed as speculation recent reports that it planned to sell Nom. |
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A dissolved humic acid was used in this study as a type of NOM because it could be easily obtained and characterised. |
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Both classical Chinese and Chu Nom were used up until the early 20th century. |
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When I visited Professor Hong at the Han-Nom Institute, he showed me the manuscript for his dictionary of Nom. |
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After spending two years as commercial director at Dairy Farmers of Britain, he was given the task of setting up the UK arm of Austrian dairy giant Nom. |
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