In Grenoble he became a close friend of Henri Beyle, the famous French author better known by his pseudonym Stendhal. |
|
The spectre of plurality and difference became a pseudonym for inchoateness and ineffectiveness. |
|
Posting under a pseudonym on an online chatroom enables you to be whoever you want to be. |
|
Mr Cavanar said that at times Mr Deman had applied for a job under two names and sometimes used a pseudonym of Phil White. |
|
You can write your blog using your real name or under a pseudonym if you prefer not to reveal your true identity to the outside world. |
|
Symbolizing their philosophy in him, Cincinnatus became a popular pseudonym in anti-federalist political writings. |
|
Five years later, the surgeon, writing under a pseudonym to protect himself from colleagues produced an insider tell-all. |
|
Due to fear of a recriminatory reception in Senegal, her editors advised her to adopt a pseudonym. |
|
It turned out that the winner was a housewife who blogged under a pseudonym. |
|
Members can instantly bond with one another while using a pseudonym and staying anonymous. |
|
In cross-examination she denied that Reeda was fictitious or a pseudonym for someone else. |
|
I was invited to appear, under my hastily improvised pseudonym, in a London heat in mid-May. |
|
This provision also applies where a pseudonym is indicated on a work, leaving no doubt as to the real identity of the author. |
|
Kiefer purposely misspells the pseudonym to suggest the countless mutilations suffered during the war. |
|
This right includes the right to claim authorship, the right to remain anonymous, or the right to use a pseudonym or pen name. |
|
Jafarli said they were asked what pseudonym Fatullayev used as a byline for his own articles. |
|
It is likely that his pseudonym is made up of his surname and that of the engraver with whom he worked, a Mr. Robinson. |
|
He used the pseudonym R Mutt to conceal his authorship when he sent the work to an exhibition of the Society of Independent Artists in New York. |
|
This allows a person living with HIV to file his or her case under a pseudonym. |
|
Bell Canada, as you know, filed an affidavit indicating that the pseudonym was that of a private citizen. |
|
|
Today Fabryka Trzciny derives its name from the surname, or rather the pseudonym under which he is known among the artistic community. |
|
Respondents may like to choose their own pseudonym for the purposes of the research. |
|
Individuals should consider the usefulness of using a pseudonym instead of their real name in a profile. |
|
Known under a pseudonym borrowed from ancient Egypt, Akhenaton is steadfastly a man of his time, a musician and citizen. |
|
He also engaged in a trail of e-mails, using that same pseudonym, and we're filing that with the clerk as well. |
|
However, they should keep in mind that the use of pseudonyms offers limited protection, as third parties may be able to lift such a pseudonym. |
|
There's also a similarity in the writing of C215 and Chris, and it's a pseudonym that expresses my personality. |
|
The date of birth and name of the mother, if known, or a pseudonym, are entered in the birth certificate. |
|
Last December it imposed new restrictions on bloggers, making it illegal for them to publish under a pseudonym or to write about politics. |
|
Idir: When I started singing on the radio I decided to go under a pseudonym because I didn't want my parents to know what I was up to. |
|
He has also published several thrillers under the pseudonym Dan Kavanagh. |
|
These stars were ready-mades and fabrications, individuals off the street, and yet performing their own individuality as a mask, a style, a pseudonym, and a personality. |
|
The author wrote under the pseudonym Sera N. Noosbig, an anagram of his name, because the article would be better received that way, Burkholder said. |
|
A Radicati analyst posted responses to the criticisms under a pseudonym. |
|
Because the publishing industry of the early and middle nineteenth century spurned female writers, Charlotte Bronte chose to work under the androgynous pseudonym Currier Bell. |
|
Her nervousness about its content made her decide to publish it under a pseudonym, for reasons that would later become clear. |
|
Leander wrote intelligent pieces for a broadsheet under a male pseudonym. |
|
Your Woman enjoyed just one week at number one for White Town, a pseudonym for one-man band Jyoti Mishra. |
|
Fawkes was installed as a caretaker and began using the pseudonym John Johnson, servant to Percy. |
|
Owen began writing poetry under the pseudonym Glaslwyn, entering his work into local eisteddfodau and succeeding in publishing some pieces. |
|
|
There can be nobody here today who is not familiar with names such as Brancusi, Eliade and Carmen Sylva, a pseudonym used by the Romanian queen 90 years ago to publish extremely well-known writings. |
|
He repeated his original story of how he had come to use the pseudonym Palmer, claiming that it was his mother's maiden name. |
|
Turpin had stolen several horses while operating under the pseudonym of Palmer. |
|
You may wish to use a pseudonym to protect your identity. |
|
You submitted the first draft of stoker under a pseudonym, Ted Foulke. |
|
He is thought to have co-authored songs for the Agatha Christie gothic rock group and written a gangster novel under a pseudonym. |
|
Requiring an ISP to identify a subscriber based on a pseudonym raises the problem identified by Justice von Finckenstein in BMG et al v. John Doe et al of assuming that the subscriber is the person using a given pseudonym. |
|
And, with a heart on pins and needles, I can say that the pseudonym that gave meaning to my vocation, has also baptized me without my being aware of it. |
|
Turpin is introduced with the pseudonym Palmer, and is later forced to escape on his horse, Black Bess. |
|
Ayckbourn used the pseudonym 'Peter Caulfield' because he was under exclusive contract to the BBC at the time. |
|
Clare Blanchard, a former girlfriend, advised him not to publish the book, or at least to do so under a pseudonym. |
|
As with his other writings, the Travels was published under a pseudonym, the fictional Lemuel Gulliver, a ship's surgeon and later a sea captain. |
|
In his Lettres sur La Nouvelle Heloise, written under a pseudonym, Voltaire offered criticism highlighting grammatical mistakes in the book. |
|
He wrote under a pseudonym, Friedrich Oswald, to avoid connecting his life in a Pietist industrialist family with his provocative writings. |
|
Can you log in anonymously or under a pseudonym? |
|
He also wrote a number of other mystery novels, both under his own name and the pseudonym Harrington Hext. |
|
In 1949, Pilcher's first book, a romance novel, was published by Mills and Boon, under the pseudonym Jane Fraser. |
|
By 1965 she had dropped the pseudonym and was signing her own name to all of her novels. |
|
Other postings under a pseudonym known to be the respondent's revealed that he was instrumental in creating the website that hosted the impugned literature and that he had control of it. |
|
Today's most interesting social practices employ the Pessoan heteronym and abjure the pseudonym. |
|
|
Jean Moulin was also an art lover and an artist in his own right who, under the pseudonym of Romanin, published caricatures, created etchings and painted watercolours. |
|
Turner's report did not, however, mention Fawkes's pseudonym in England, John Johnson, and did not reach Cecil until late in November, well after the plot had been discovered. |
|
A pseudonym is a name that differs from an original orthonym, and as popularly understood is a new name that a person assumes for a particular purpose. |
|
Christie then set her first novel, Snow Upon the Desert, in Cairo, and drew from her recent experiences in that city, written under the pseudonym Monosyllaba. |
|
Rowling said that she had enjoyed working under a pseudonym. |
|
That same year he wrote Letters from England under the pseudonym Don Manuel Alvarez Espriella, an account of a tour supposedly from a foreigner's viewpoint. |
|
Russell exhibits regularly with the Oregon State University faculty and was juried into the Portland Art Museum Biennial under the pseudonym Parlando Rubato. |
|
Rowling's pseudonym Robert Galbraith was largely set in Barrow. |
|
She suggests that Dionysius had to look to apostolic authority, hence he took the pseudonym Dionysius in order to be accepted by Chalcedonians and Monophysites. |
|
Bookchin's first book, Our Synthetic Environment, was published under the pseudonym Lewis Herber in 1962, a few months before Rachel Carson's Silent Spring. |
|