Moniker vs Emblem - What's the difference?
moniker | emblem |
A personal name or nickname; an informal label, often drawing attention to a particular attribute.
* 2000 , Jim Phelan, Irish Writing in the 1940s'', David Pierce (editor), ''Irish Writing in the Twentieth Century: A Reader ,
* 2010 , Linda S. Miller, Kären M. Hess, Christine M. H. Orthmann, 6th Edition, Community Policing: Partnerships for Problem Solving ,
* 2010 , Neal K. Devaraj, Ralph Weissleder, 30: "Click Chemistry": Applications to Molecular Imaging'', Ralph Weissleder, Brian D. Ross, Alnawaz Rehemtulla, Sanjiv Sam (editors), ''Molecular Imaging, Principles and Practice ,
* 2012 , Richard Worth, Baseball Team Names ,
A signature.
* 2007 , Barry L. Beyerstein, Chapter 16: Graphology—a total write-off'', Sergio Della Sala (editor), ''Tall Tales About the Mind and Brain: Separating Fact from Fiction ,
(computing) An object (structured item of data) used to associate the name of an object with its location.
* 1998 , Don Box, Essential COM ,
* 1999 , Tim Hill, Windows 2000: Windows Script Host ,
* 2011 , Thuan L. Thai, Learning DCOM , O'Reilly,
A representative symbol, such as a trademark or logo.
* Shakespeare
Something which represents a larger whole.
* '>citation
Inlay; inlaid or mosaic work; something ornamental inserted in a surface.
A picture accompanied with a motto, a set of verses, etc. intended as a moral lesson or meditation.
As nouns the difference between moniker and emblem
is that moniker is a personal name or nickname; an informal label, often drawing attention to a particular attribute while emblem is emblem.moniker
English
Alternative forms
* monacer * monicker * monnikerNoun
(en noun)- The rookie was upset at being called Lemon Drop until she realized that everyone on the team had a silly moniker .
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- Again fairly common, and always amusing, are the monikers drawn from the (imagined) childhood of a particular vagrant.
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- A 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 sole identity, the only way they see thselves and the only name they go by.
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- Recently, a class of reactions has gained tremendous attention in the chemistry community under the moniker of "click chemistry," a concept introduced by Kolb and colleagues.
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- Actually, the various monikers Pilgrims, Puritans, Plymouth Rocks, Red Stockings, Hubs and Hubites were frequently used, informally, for both Boston big league clubs until 1912.
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- 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.
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- Monikers' are often composed from other ' monikers to allow object hierarchies to be navigated based on a textual description of a path.
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- 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.
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- There are different types of monikers', but the one that deals with object instantiation is the class '''moniker'''. A class ' moniker portrays a class factory.
Synonyms
* (personal name or nickname) byname, nickname, pseudonym, sobriquet, street name * (signature) tagSee also
* cognomen * nom de guerre * nom de plume * nom de Web * trademarkemblem
English
Noun
(en noun)- The trucks were emblazoned with the emblem of the Red Cross and were not supposed to be targeted.
- His cicatrice, an emblem of war, here on his sinister cheek.
- The rampant poverty in the ethnic slums was just an emblem of the group's disenfranchisement by the society as a whole.
- (Milton)
