(1) Bearing or identified by an assumed (often pen
(2) Bearing or identified by an assumed (often pen) name
(1) Would a true believer really have faked a vision of Christ, as did the pseudonymous author of Revelation, or a letter of Peter or Paul?
(2) The only writer identified in the book by full name is the author; the other 18 are probably pseudonymous accompanied by a rough bios mostly outlining their personalities.
(3) In the Chronicle of Higher Education, a pseudonymous assistant professor writes about the burdens of being a conservative student and then tenure-track professor.
(4) Another myth is dynamited in The Spectator in which a pseudonymous publisher reveals the truth behind bookshop u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510recommendationsu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb.
(5) The pseudonymous author of Fear and Trembling - Johannes de silentio - disclaims any pretensions to be a philosopher, at least in the fashionable Hegelian sense.
(6) Indeed, I am quite surprised that my pseudonym has lasted this long and that I have not been unmasked by a reader less respectful of my decision to blog pseudonymously than Howard has been.
(7) U251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510You do see some of the barriers of rank and hierarchy break down,u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb says the woman who blogs pseudonymously as the Invisible Adjunct.
(8) Curiously it was only today that off-blog I was talking about women choosing to blog anonymously or pseudonymously , through reasons of fear.
(9) He found a nice little bit by Bruce Metzger saying that Jude probably wrote Jude, since it's unlikely that anyone writing pseudonymously would choose the name Judas.
(10) So women academic bloggers want to explore these issues - they realise it is an essential part of scholarship and life in the academe - but often they can only safely do so pseudonymously .