Apodo in english

Nickname

pronunciation: nɪkneɪm part of speech: noun
In gestures

apodar = nickname ; dub ; monicker [moniker]. 

Example: The physical dimensions of novels then tended to increase, and during the 1820s a standard form of three substantial volumes -- the three-decker as it was later nicknamed -- became established, and dominated the production of English fiction in book form from the 1830s to the 1880s.Example: Carlyle Systems Inc has recently issued version 2.1 of their cataloguing input/edit module, dubbed CATIE.Example: For us not to be monickered as a backward society we should go with the flow -- in this age of globalization it is proper to communicate in the language understood by most.

apodo = monicker [moniker] ; sobriquet [soubriquet] ; nickname ; agnomen. 

Example: Those are, as I said in another context, monickers that were laid on them by ignorant and, I would say, mean-minded authors for their own purposes.Example: Typically, the subelements will fall within the following categories: forename, patronymic, family name, sobriquet, and dynastic name.Example: The name to be chosen for the author must be, by rule 40, 'the name by which he is commonly identified, whether it is his real name, or an assumed name, nickname, title of nobility, or other appellation'.Example: The article is entitled 'His Occupational Agnomen'.

more:

» ganarse el apodoearn + the nickname .

Example: He had earned the nickname the 'Teflon president' because criticism would not stick to him.

Apodo synonyms

moniker in spanish: apodo, pronunciation: mɑnɪkɜr part of speech: noun dub in spanish: doblar, pronunciation: dʌb part of speech: verb sobriquet in spanish: sobrenombre, pronunciation: soʊbrəkeɪ part of speech: noun cognomen in spanish: nombre, pronunciation: kɑnhoʊmən part of speech: noun soubriquet in spanish: apodo, pronunciation: subrɪkət part of speech: noun
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