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Under the nom de guerre of Actress, Cunningham makes what seems, on the surface, to be fragmentary, abrasive techno music.
For years, Gadahn was al-Qaida's premier American member – his nom de guerre was "Azzam the American" – and a fixture of its pre-social-media English-language propaganda.
This superb adaptation of the 1950 short story written by Karen Blixen (under her nom de plume of Isak Dinesen), which first appeared in the Ladies Home Journall magazine, remains true to its literary source with no loss to cinematic quality.
A former RUC Special Branch officer-turned-author under the nom de plume Alan Barker told me that his undercover unit in Derry could not believe the news that the IRA had shot Flood.
The jihadist, who uses the nom de guerre Abu Ahmed, entered Camp Bucca as a young man a decade ago, and is now a senior official within Islamic State (Isis) – having risen through its ranks with many of the men who served time alongside him in prison.
I had been une femme très, très contente avec un dull mari whose nom I can't souvenir et François had been devoted to Ségolène.
The nom de guerre he adopted in 1988, Min Ko Naing, or "conqueror of kings", has stuck, despite the years he has since spent in prison.He and his "88 Generation" of student jailbirds, most freed only last year, are attempting to reclaim a central role.
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He was 17, still dressed in what passed for his Lord's Resistance Army uniform and still getting used to the idea he was no longer Ambush, his nom-de-guerre, but Patrick Ocaya.
Guardian Australia has found a now-deleted blog written under Bilardi's nom-de-guerre, Abu Abdullah al-Australi, which appears to provide a chilling insight into how a precocious young man became obsessed with political injustices and embraced violent extremism as the answer.
See articleJosé Ramos-Horta, a Nobel peace laureate, won a decisive victory in a presidential election in Timor-Leste over Francisco Guterres, a former guerrilla running under his nom-de-guerre, "Lu-Olo".
The man principally responsible for the grisly tests, and much else besides, was a 55-year-old Egyptian chemist called Midhat Mursi al-Sayid Umar, better known by his nom-de-guerre, Abu Khabab al-Masri.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com