moniker
Collocations
3ADJ.
known, silly
MONIKER + NOUN
bell, others
PREP.
in
Definitions
noun
A personal name or nickname; an informal label, often drawing attention to a particular attribute.
The rookie was upset at being called Lemon Drop until she realized that everyone on the team had a silly moniker.
Again fairly common, and always amusing, are the monikers drawn from the (imagined) childhood of a particular vagrant.
A person's signature.
The monikers of both these famously well-endowed movie stars contain enormous sworls (two of them, no less, for Ms West!) that could only signify you-know-what, according to Ms Koren.
An object (structured item of data) used to associate the name of an object with its location.
Monikers are often composed from other monikers to allow object hierarchies to be navigated based on a textual description of a path.
The GetObject function can also be used to access objects via monikers. A moniker is itself an object that acts as an intermediary between VBScript and the actual object to be accessed. Monikers are typically used when the objects to be accessed exist in a namespace other than the file system.
Thesaurus
Idioms & Phrases
Example Bank
4The rookie was upset at being called Lemon Drop until she realized that everyone on the team had a silly moniker.
WiktionaryAgain fairly common, and always amusing, are the monikers drawn from the (imagined) childhood of a particular vagrant.
WiktionaryA gang member may receive a new identity by taking on a nickname, or moniker, which others in the gang world would recognize. Monikers affirm a youth's commitment to gang life and may become their sol
WiktionaryIsabelle was known by the moniker “Bell.”
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