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Sobriquet
Assumed or given nickname
Assumed or given nickname
A sobriquet ( ) is a descriptive nickname, sometimes assumed, but often given by another. A sobriquet is distinct from a pseudonym in that it is typically a familiar name used in place of a real name without the need for explanation; it may even become more familiar than the original name.
An example is Mohandas Gandhi, who is better known as Mahatma Gandhi ("mahatma" means "great soul" in Sanskrit).
The term sobriquet is equally applicable as a name for a person, group of people, historical event, or place. Well-known places often have sobriquets, such as New York City, often called the "Big Apple", or Rome, the "Eternal City", or Vienna, the "Golden Apple" or Paris the "City of Light".
Etymology
The modern French and English spelling is sobriquet. Two earlier variants are soubriquet and sotbriquet. The first variant, "soubriquet", dates from the 15th century and is rarely used now, in English or French.
The early 14th-century word soubzsbriquez meant a "little blow under the chin" in French, also described as a chuck under the chin; this was derived from soubs, mod. sous (), under.
Usage
Sobriquets are "a form of identification that goes beyond a traditional name and offers insight into a person’s character, appearance, profession, or any other distinguishing feature". They are used in politics, music, literature and for royalty, celebrities, and athletes.
Candidates for public office and political figures may be described with sobriquets, while living or posthumously. For example, president of the United States Abraham Lincoln was called "Honest Abe". An affectionate contemporary sobriquet for Ulysses S. Grant was the "American Sphinx" as a man of deeds rather than for verbal self-promotion.
Early uses of sobriquets in writing and literature include the Dead Sea Scrolls and in Tang and Song (Southern Sung) dynasty poetry. Contemporary usage is common in the English and French languages.
Examples
- The King (of rock and roll) – Elvis Presley, famous vocalist and musician
- The Lion City – Singapore, the city-state, also known as Little Red Dot, The Garden City
- The Big Yin – Billy Connolly, Glaswegian comedian commonly referred to as "The Big Yin", meaning "The Big One" in Scots
- The Big Smoke – London or Toronto
- The Land of the Rising Sun – Japan
- Columbia – The United States or the Americas, poetic name
- Dixie, Dixieland (from the Mason–Dixon line) – the eleven Southern states that seceded and fought against the U.S. in the American Civil War
- The Fourth Estate – the press
- Pearl of the Orient – the Philippines, referring to its location in the Southeast Asia (or the East, with "Orient" meaning "East")
- Graveyard of empires – Afghanistan
- Gautam Buddha – Siddhartha Gautama, derived from the word 'Budh', which means 'enlightened'.
- Uncle Sam – the U.S. in general or specifically its government, likely from the initials "U.S."
- John Bull – the UK in general or specifically, its government (originally an attack against the Whigs, their foreign policy, and their financiers who were profiting from wars with other nations).
- Uncle Joe – Joseph Stalin
- The Sun King – Louis XIV of France
- Papa Doc – François Duvalier, 34th president of Haiti
- The Sage of Chelsea – Thomas Carlyle, Scots philosopher
- The War to End All Wars – World War I; used ironically since World War II
- The Windy City – Chicago, Illinois, US
- Motor City – Detroit, Michigan, US
- The Mile High City – Denver, Colorado, US
- The Big Apple – New York, New York, US
- The Little Apple – Manhattan, Kansas, US
- The Mini Apple – Minneapolis, Minnesota, US
- Man's best friend – dogs, derived from the origins of dogs, it indicates the relationship that has developed between the two species as they have each evolved to form a symbiotic relationship that is unique among human relationships to domestic animals.
- Scotty from marketing – Scott Morrison, referring to his former marketing career
- "Emiye Menelik", a name of Emperor Menelik II of Ethiopia, who was popularly and affectionately recognized for his kindness ("emiye" means "mother" in Amharic)
References
Sources
References
- Peterson, Rick. (2015-12-01). "How the Siege of Vienna Changed the Course of History".
- "Etymology of sobriquet".
- (2023). "How and When To Use "Sobriquet"".
- (9 September 2015). "Epithet: Definition and Examples {{!}} LiteraryTerms.net".
- (1 June 2008). "Honest Abe: Abraham Lincoln and the Moral Character". Foreign Policy Research Institute.
- (1965). "Provenance of the Ulysses S. Grant Papers". Library of Congress.
- (24 January 2019). "A New Understanding of the Sobriquet דורשי החלקות: Why Qumranites Rejected Pharisaic Traditions". Brill.
- (1994). "Voices of the Song Lyric in China". University of California Press.
- (2002). "Sobriquet: Définition de Sobriquet". Centre National de Resources Textuelles et Lexicales (National Center for Textual and Lexical Resources).
- "Singapore". Bartleby.
- (2 May 2020). "BBC Scotland season to celebrate Billy Connolly". BBC Media Centre.
- "Uncle Sam".
- "Morrison rejects 'snarky' new nickname".
- "Ethiopia—Divine Endurance".
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