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"assumed name for" is a correct and commonly used phrase in written English.
It is typically used to refer to a name that someone uses instead of their legal name, often for privacy or personal reasons. Example: The author, who goes by the assumed name for J.K. Rowling, has sold millions of copies of her renowned Harry Potter series.
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In Florida, he lived under an assumed name for more than 25 years.
Along with her husband, David Greenglass Ethelel's brother and a central figure in the case — Mrs. Greenglass had lived in the New York metropolitan area under an assumed name for more than four decades.
I proposed to her that if she and Cosgrove were to marry and live in the West under an assumed name for ten years I would support them liberally.
Two late 60s crazes for freeze songs and funky horse tunes gave birth to Horse With a Freeze Pts 1&2 by Roy Ward (an assumed name for New Orleans soul prince Eddie Bo).
Like the scruffy town where she's been living under an assumed name for 25 years, Amber is a bit gaudy, but also gutsy and brave, and it's distressing to watch her being physically attacked after she's unmasked as a notorious baby-killer.
The duration that you will be using the assumed name for.
Similar(51)
Jessica and Ali are assumed names for the purposes of this article.
(Mr. Paul was not, though, as some assume, named for Ayn Rand; his full name is Randal).
By Hendrik Hertzberg May 19, 2010 Elsewhere in the Times today, Kate Zernike reports that Rand Paul, a second-generation right-wing libertarian, "was not, though, as some assume, named for Ayn Rand; his full name is Randal".
Elsewhere in the Times today, Kate Zernike reports that Rand Paul, a second-generation right-wing libertarian, "was not, though, as some assume, named for Ayn Rand; his full name is Randal".
Some believed he was publishing under an assumed name, and for a while in the late 1970s, William Wharton, author of "Birdy," was rumored to be Mr. Salinger, writing under another name, until it turned out that William Wharton was instead a pen name for the writer Albert du Aime.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com