{"version":"https://jsonfeed.org/version/1.1","title":"Also Know As","home_page_url":"https://home.aka.tw","feed_url":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/json/","description":"<p><img src=\"https://earth-cdn.aka.tw/home-aka-tw/production/media/rich-editor/channels/H6wWTaAeuzv/image-858d379545035bd969332f8593fcb2da.png\"></p><p>Also Known As (AKA) is a phrase used to indicate alternative names, aliases, or identities for a person, place, or entity.</p>","icon":"https://earth-cdn.aka.tw/home-aka-tw/production/images/channel-568af7bdb364b5cfc99d69bcf67e67ba.png","favicon":"https://earth-cdn.aka.tw/home-aka-tw/production/images/favicon-1f3bce874bfc77b5af9e81a495119754.png","language":"en-ca","items":[{"id":"8T3oI8MbJXF","title":"Alias Dictus","url":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/i/lias-dictus-8T3oI8MbJXF/","content_html":"<h3>1. The Latin Root: <em>Alias Dictus</em></h3><p>The direct ancestor of \"also known as\" is the Latin legal term \"alias dictus\".</p><ul><li>Translation: <em>Alias</em> means \"at another time\" or \"otherwise,\" and <em>dictus</em> means \"called\" or \"said.\" Together, they translate to \"otherwise called.\"</li><li>Legal Function: In medieval and early modern English law, precision was paramount. If a person was indicted under one name but known by another, the legal case could be thrown out for a \"misnomer.\" To prevent this, clerks began listing every possible name a person used, connecting them with <em>alias dictus</em>.</li><li class=\"ql-indent-1\"><em>Example:</em> \"John Smith, <em>alias dictus</em> John the Baker.\"</li></ul><h3>2. The Era of Fluid Surnames (15th–17th Centuries)</h3><p>Contrary to popular belief, the historical use of \"also known as\" (via <em>alias</em>) was not primarily about criminal deception. Between 1460 and 1650, English surnames were still stabilizing, and ordinary people frequently used multiple last names for legitimate reasons.</p><p>Legal records from this period are filled with <em>alias dictus</em> (later shortened to just <em>alias</em>) to track these changes:</p><ul><li>Matrilineal Inheritance: If a man inherited land from his mother, he might adopt her surname to secure the title, while keeping his father's name for other business.</li><li>Step-parents: Children often took the name of a stepfather but retained their birth name for inheritance purposes, leading to names like \"William Shakespeare <em>alias</em> Hall.\"</li><li>Patronymics: In areas like Wales and Cornwall, the system of using a father's first name as a last name (e.g., \"David, son of John\") was slowly being replaced by fixed surnames. During the transition, a man might be \"David John <em>alias</em> David Jones.\"</li></ul><h3>3. The Anglicization: \"Otherwise Called\" to \"Also Known As\"</h3><p>As legal proceedings shifted from Latin to English, <em>alias dictus</em> was translated.</p><ul><li>Early Translations: In the 1600s and 1700s, it was most commonly rendered as \"otherwise called.\"</li><li>Evolution: The specific phrasing \"also known as\" began to appear more frequently in the 19th and early 20th centuries as a standard descriptor in bureaucratic records, police blotters, and library catalogs. It served the same function as <em>alias</em> but in plain English, distinguishing it from the Latin term which had begun to acquire a sinister connotation (the \"criminal alias\").</li></ul><h3>4. The Birth of the Acronym: a.k.a. (20th Century)</h3><p>The abbreviation a.k.a. (or aka) is a relatively modern invention, born of bureaucratic efficiency in the United States.</p><ul><li>Earliest Citations:</li><li class=\"ql-indent-1\">1935: The acronym is attested in US legal documents and police files. It allowed clerks to quickly type multiple names on standard forms without writing out the full phrase.</li><li class=\"ql-indent-1\">1948: The <em>Oxford English Dictionary</em> cites a definitive usage in the <em>Catalogue of Copyright Entries</em>, cementing its place in official administrative language.</li><li>The \"Adverb\" Shift: Originally, <em>alias</em> was an adverb (e.g., \"Smith <em>alias</em> Jones\" meant \"Smith, <em>at another time</em>, Jones\"). However, as <em>alias</em> became a noun (e.g., \"He used an <em>alias</em>\"), English speakers needed a new linking term. \"Also known as\" and its snappy abbreviation \"a.k.a.\" filled this grammatical gap perfectly.</li></ul><h3>5. Modern Usage: From the FBI to Jay-Z</h3><p>In the late 20th century, the term migrated from police files to pop culture.</p><ul><li>Criminal to Cool: In the 1970s and 80s, the abbreviation became a staple of Hip Hop culture. MCs and DJs used \"a.k.a.\" to list their various personas (e.g., \"The Notorious B.I.G., a.k.a. Biggie Smalls\"). This mimicked the \"rap sheet\" aesthetic of law enforcement but reclaimed it as a badge of complexity and street credibility.</li><li>Digital Identity: Today, the phrase has detached from its legal roots entirely. In the age of social media handles and gamer tags, \"also known as\" is the standard bridge between a person's \"real\" life and their digital avatar.</li></ul><p><br></p>","content_text":"1. THE LATIN ROOT: ALIAS DICTUS\n\nThe direct ancestor of \"also known as\" is the Latin legal term \"alias dictus\".\n\n * Translation: Alias means \"at another time\" or \"otherwise,\" and dictus means\n   \"called\" or \"said.\" Together, they translate to \"otherwise called.\"\n * Legal Function: In medieval and early modern English law, precision was\n   paramount. If a person was indicted under one name but known by another, the\n   legal case could be thrown out for a \"misnomer.\" To prevent this, clerks\n   began listing every possible name a person used, connecting them with alias\n   dictus.\n * Example: \"John Smith, alias dictus John the Baker.\"\n\n\n2. THE ERA OF FLUID SURNAMES (15TH–17TH CENTURIES)\n\nContrary to popular belief, the historical use of \"also known as\" (via alias)\nwas not primarily about criminal deception. Between 1460 and 1650, English\nsurnames were still stabilizing, and ordinary people frequently used multiple\nlast names for legitimate reasons.\n\nLegal records from this period are filled with alias dictus (later shortened to\njust alias) to track these changes:\n\n * Matrilineal Inheritance: If a man inherited land from his mother, he might\n   adopt her surname to secure the title, while keeping his father's name for\n   other business.\n * Step-parents: Children often took the name of a stepfather but retained their\n   birth name for inheritance purposes, leading to names like \"William\n   Shakespeare alias Hall.\"\n * Patronymics: In areas like Wales and Cornwall, the system of using a father's\n   first name as a last name (e.g., \"David, son of John\") was slowly being\n   replaced by fixed surnames. During the transition, a man might be \"David John\n   alias David Jones.\"\n\n\n3. THE ANGLICIZATION: \"OTHERWISE CALLED\" TO \"ALSO KNOWN AS\"\n\nAs legal proceedings shifted from Latin to English, alias dictus was translated.\n\n * Early Translations: In the 1600s and 1700s, it was most commonly rendered as\n   \"otherwise called.\"\n * Evolution: The specific phrasing \"also known as\" began to appear more\n   frequently in the 19th and early 20th centuries as a standard descriptor in\n   bureaucratic records, police blotters, and library catalogs. It served the\n   same function as alias but in plain English, distinguishing it from the Latin\n   term which had begun to acquire a sinister connotation (the \"criminal\n   alias\").\n\n\n4. THE BIRTH OF THE ACRONYM: A.K.A. (20TH CENTURY)\n\nThe abbreviation a.k.a. (or aka) is a relatively modern invention, born of\nbureaucratic efficiency in the United States.\n\n * Earliest Citations:\n * 1935: The acronym is attested in US legal documents and police files. It\n   allowed clerks to quickly type multiple names on standard forms without\n   writing out the full phrase.\n * 1948: The Oxford English Dictionary cites a definitive usage in the Catalogue\n   of Copyright Entries, cementing its place in official administrative\n   language.\n * The \"Adverb\" Shift: Originally, alias was an adverb (e.g., \"Smith alias\n   Jones\" meant \"Smith, at another time, Jones\"). However, as alias became a\n   noun (e.g., \"He used an alias\"), English speakers needed a new linking term.\n   \"Also known as\" and its snappy abbreviation \"a.k.a.\" filled this grammatical\n   gap perfectly.\n\n\n5. MODERN USAGE: FROM THE FBI TO JAY-Z\n\nIn the late 20th century, the term migrated from police files to pop culture.\n\n * Criminal to Cool: In the 1970s and 80s, the abbreviation became a staple of\n   Hip Hop culture. MCs and DJs used \"a.k.a.\" to list their various personas\n   (e.g., \"The Notorious B.I.G., a.k.a. Biggie Smalls\"). This mimicked the \"rap\n   sheet\" aesthetic of law enforcement but reclaimed it as a badge of complexity\n   and street credibility.\n * Digital Identity: Today, the phrase has detached from its legal roots\n   entirely. In the age of social media handles and gamer tags, \"also known as\"\n   is the standard bridge between a person's \"real\" life and their digital\n   avatar.\n\n\n","date_published":"2026-02-02T16:10:31.510Z","_microfeed":{"web_url":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/i/alias-dictus-8T3oI8MbJXF/","json_url":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/i/8T3oI8MbJXF/json/","rss_url":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/i/8T3oI8MbJXF/rss/","guid":"8T3oI8MbJXF","status":"published","itunes:episodeType":"full","date_published_short":"Mon Feb 02 2026","date_published_ms":1770048631510}},{"id":"JICziQeKHSy","title":"又稱","url":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/i/JICziQeKHSy/","content_html":"<h4><strong>1. 簡介 (Introduction)</strong></h4><p><strong>AKA</strong> (或寫作 a.k.a.) 是英文 phrase <strong>\"Also Known As\"</strong> 的縮寫，直譯為「也被稱為」或「又名」。在中文語境中，它用來連結一個人的本名與他的綽號、藝名、筆名，或是用來解釋某事物的另一個通俗名稱。</p><ul><li><strong>中文對應詞：</strong> 又名、亦稱、俗稱、化名。</li><li><strong>發音：</strong> 在台灣，大家通常會直接唸三個英文字母 <strong>\"A-K-A\"</strong>。</li></ul><h4><strong>2. 歷史淵源 (History)</strong></h4><p>這個縮寫原本多見於英語系國家的警務與法律文件中。早期的通緝令或法律檔案為了列出嫌疑犯的所有假名（Alias），會大量使用 \"also known as\"。</p><ul><li><strong>傳入台灣：</strong> 隨著美國流行文化（特别是嘻哈音樂 Hip-Hop 和好萊塢電影）傳入台灣，這個詞彙開始被年輕人知曉。饒舌歌手介紹自己時，常會用 AKA 來帶出自己的江湖稱號。</li><li><strong>網路普及：</strong> 隨著網際網路與 PTT、Dcard 等社群論壇的興起，AKA 因為輸入方便（僅需三個鍵），逐漸取代了筆劃較多的「也就是」、「又叫做」，成為網路流行語。</li></ul><h4><strong>3. 普及程度 (Popularity)</strong></h4><p>在台灣，AKA 已經不僅僅是年輕人的用語，許多媒體、綜藝節目甚至新聞標題都會使用。</p><ul><li><strong>甚至比中文更常用：</strong> 在某些輕鬆的語境下，說「AKA」比說「又被稱為」來得更順口、更有節奏感。</li><li><strong>文化融合：</strong> 台灣人習慣在中文句子中夾雜英文單字（Code-mixing），AKA 是一個非常典型的例子。它已經內化為台灣口語的一部分，即便是不太會講英文的長輩，可能也在電視上看過這個詞。</li></ul><h4><strong>4. 現今用法 (Current Usage)</strong></h4><p>目前在台灣，AKA 的用法主要分為「正式介紹」與「幽默嘲諷」兩種：</p><ul><li><strong>正式或描述性用法：</strong> 用來補充說明。</li><li class=\"ql-indent-1\"><em>例句：</em> 「這是張惠妹，<strong>AKA</strong> 阿密特。」（連結藝名）</li><li class=\"ql-indent-1\"><em>例句：</em> 「紐約，<strong>AKA</strong> 大蘋果 (The Big Apple)。」（連結城市別稱）</li><li><strong>幽默或諷刺用法：</strong> 這是目前網路上最常見的用法，用來揭示某人或某事的「真實面目」或「槽點」。</li><li class=\"ql-indent-1\"><em>例句：</em> 「我要去上班了，<strong>AKA</strong> 出賣靈魂。」（用來諷刺工作的本質）</li><li class=\"ql-indent-1\"><em>例句：</em> 「這是我的錢包，<strong>AKA</strong> 沙漠。」（自嘲錢包空空如也）</li></ul>","content_text":"1. 簡介 (INTRODUCTION)\n\nAKA (或寫作 a.k.a.) 是英文 phrase \"Also Known As\"\n的縮寫，直譯為「也被稱為」或「又名」。在中文語境中，它用來連結一個人的本名與他的綽號、藝名、筆名，或是用來解釋某事物的另一個通俗名稱。\n\n * 中文對應詞： 又名、亦稱、俗稱、化名。\n * 發音： 在台灣，大家通常會直接唸三個英文字母 \"A-K-A\"。\n\n2. 歷史淵源 (HISTORY)\n\n這個縮寫原本多見於英語系國家的警務與法律文件中。早期的通緝令或法律檔案為了列出嫌疑犯的所有假名（Alias），會大量使用 \"also known as\"。\n\n * 傳入台灣： 隨著美國流行文化（特别是嘻哈音樂 Hip-Hop 和好萊塢電影）傳入台灣，這個詞彙開始被年輕人知曉。饒舌歌手介紹自己時，常會用 AKA\n   來帶出自己的江湖稱號。\n * 網路普及： 隨著網際網路與 PTT、Dcard 等社群論壇的興起，AKA\n   因為輸入方便（僅需三個鍵），逐漸取代了筆劃較多的「也就是」、「又叫做」，成為網路流行語。\n\n3. 普及程度 (POPULARITY)\n\n在台灣，AKA 已經不僅僅是年輕人的用語，許多媒體、綜藝節目甚至新聞標題都會使用。\n\n * 甚至比中文更常用： 在某些輕鬆的語境下，說「AKA」比說「又被稱為」來得更順口、更有節奏感。\n * 文化融合： 台灣人習慣在中文句子中夾雜英文單字（Code-mixing），AKA\n   是一個非常典型的例子。它已經內化為台灣口語的一部分，即便是不太會講英文的長輩，可能也在電視上看過這個詞。\n\n4. 現今用法 (CURRENT USAGE)\n\n目前在台灣，AKA 的用法主要分為「正式介紹」與「幽默嘲諷」兩種：\n\n * 正式或描述性用法： 用來補充說明。\n * 例句： 「這是張惠妹，AKA 阿密特。」（連結藝名）\n * 例句： 「紐約，AKA 大蘋果 (The Big Apple)。」（連結城市別稱）\n * 幽默或諷刺用法： 這是目前網路上最常見的用法，用來揭示某人或某事的「真實面目」或「槽點」。\n * 例句： 「我要去上班了，AKA 出賣靈魂。」（用來諷刺工作的本質）\n * 例句： 「這是我的錢包，AKA 沙漠。」（自嘲錢包空空如也）","date_published":"2026-02-02T01:50:53.524Z","_microfeed":{"web_url":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/i/又稱-JICziQeKHSy/","json_url":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/i/JICziQeKHSy/json/","rss_url":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/i/JICziQeKHSy/rss/","guid":"JICziQeKHSy","status":"published","itunes:episodeType":"full","date_published_short":"Sun Feb 01 2026","date_published_ms":1769997053524}},{"id":"F25cU-DCnO0","title":"Also Know As","url":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/i/also-know-a-F25cU-DCnO0/","content_html":"<h4><strong>1. Introduction</strong></h4><p>\"Also Known As\" is a phrase used to indicate that a person, place, or object has another name. It is most commonly seen in its abbreviated form, <strong>aka</strong> (pronounced as individual letters: <em>ay-kay-ay</em>). It serves as a bridge between a primary name and a secondary name, such as a pseudonym, stage name, nickname, legal alias, or former title.</p><ul><li><strong>Function:</strong> It creates an equivalence between two identities.</li><li><strong>Example:</strong> \"Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta, <strong>aka</strong> Lady Gaga, is a famous singer.\"</li></ul><h4><strong>2. History</strong></h4><p>While the concept of using multiple names dates back to antiquity, the specific abbreviation \"aka\" is a relatively modern English construct.</p><ul><li><strong>Latin Roots:</strong> Before \"aka\" became standard, the Latin word <strong>\"alias\"</strong> (meaning \"at another time\" or \"otherwise\") was the primary term used in legal and formal contexts to denote a false or assumed name.</li><li><strong>Bureaucratic Origins:</strong> The phrase \"also known as\" began appearing frequently in law enforcement and bureaucratic records in the early 20th century. It was used on \"Wanted\" posters and court documents to list criminals who used multiple aliases to evade capture.</li><li><strong>Rise of the Acronym:</strong> The abbreviation \"a.k.a.\" began to appear in print around the mid-20th century (citations exist from the 1940s and 50s). It started as administrative shorthand to save space on typewritten forms before bleeding into mainstream culture.</li></ul><h4><strong>3. Popularity</strong></h4><p>The transition of \"aka\" from police files to pop culture happened largely in the 1970s, 80s, and 90s.</p><ul><li><strong>Hip-Hop Culture:</strong> In the 1980s and 90s, Hip-Hop culture played a massive role in popularizing the term. Rappers often have multiple alter egos (e.g., \"The Notorious B.I.G., aka Biggie Smalls\"). Using \"aka\" became a stylistic way to introduce one's expanding reputation.</li><li><strong>Journalism and Literature:</strong> Writers found it to be a punchy, efficient way to provide context without writing long sentences like \"who is otherwise referred to as.\"</li><li><strong>Efficiency:</strong> It is universally recognized and consists of only three letters/syllables, making it much faster to say or write than \"also called\" or \"sometimes known as.\"</li></ul><h4><strong>4. Current Usage</strong></h4><p>Today, \"aka\" is ubiquitous in English, ranging from highly formal to strictly humorous contexts.</p><ul><li><strong>Formal/Legal:</strong> It is still used to list business trade names or previous legal names (e.g., \"Meta Platforms, Inc., aka Facebook\").</li><li><strong>Entertainment:</strong> Used for branding and stage names.</li><li><strong>Social/Humorous:</strong> This is the most common modern usage. It is often used sarcastically to describe the <em>true nature</em> of something.</li><li class=\"ql-indent-1\"><em>Example:</em> \"I’m going to my day job, <strong>aka</strong> my personal hell.\"</li><li class=\"ql-indent-1\"><em>Example:</em> \"This is my cat, <strong>aka</strong> the ruler of this house.\"</li><li><strong>Digital Age:</strong> In internet slang, it is often written in lowercase without periods (aka) and is used rapidly in tweets and captions to provide context or rebranding info.</li></ul><p><br></p>","content_text":"1. INTRODUCTION\n\n\"Also Known As\" is a phrase used to indicate that a person, place, or object has\nanother name. It is most commonly seen in its abbreviated form, aka (pronounced\nas individual letters: ay-kay-ay). It serves as a bridge between a primary name\nand a secondary name, such as a pseudonym, stage name, nickname, legal alias, or\nformer title.\n\n * Function: It creates an equivalence between two identities.\n * Example: \"Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta, aka Lady Gaga, is a famous\n   singer.\"\n\n2. HISTORY\n\nWhile the concept of using multiple names dates back to antiquity, the specific\nabbreviation \"aka\" is a relatively modern English construct.\n\n * Latin Roots: Before \"aka\" became standard, the Latin word \"alias\" (meaning\n   \"at another time\" or \"otherwise\") was the primary term used in legal and\n   formal contexts to denote a false or assumed name.\n * Bureaucratic Origins: The phrase \"also known as\" began appearing frequently\n   in law enforcement and bureaucratic records in the early 20th century. It was\n   used on \"Wanted\" posters and court documents to list criminals who used\n   multiple aliases to evade capture.\n * Rise of the Acronym: The abbreviation \"a.k.a.\" began to appear in print\n   around the mid-20th century (citations exist from the 1940s and 50s). It\n   started as administrative shorthand to save space on typewritten forms before\n   bleeding into mainstream culture.\n\n3. POPULARITY\n\nThe transition of \"aka\" from police files to pop culture happened largely in the\n1970s, 80s, and 90s.\n\n * Hip-Hop Culture: In the 1980s and 90s, Hip-Hop culture played a massive role\n   in popularizing the term. Rappers often have multiple alter egos (e.g., \"The\n   Notorious B.I.G., aka Biggie Smalls\"). Using \"aka\" became a stylistic way to\n   introduce one's expanding reputation.\n * Journalism and Literature: Writers found it to be a punchy, efficient way to\n   provide context without writing long sentences like \"who is otherwise\n   referred to as.\"\n * Efficiency: It is universally recognized and consists of only three\n   letters/syllables, making it much faster to say or write than \"also called\"\n   or \"sometimes known as.\"\n\n4. CURRENT USAGE\n\nToday, \"aka\" is ubiquitous in English, ranging from highly formal to strictly\nhumorous contexts.\n\n * Formal/Legal: It is still used to list business trade names or previous legal\n   names (e.g., \"Meta Platforms, Inc., aka Facebook\").\n * Entertainment: Used for branding and stage names.\n * Social/Humorous: This is the most common modern usage. It is often used\n   sarcastically to describe the true nature of something.\n * Example: \"I’m going to my day job, aka my personal hell.\"\n * Example: \"This is my cat, aka the ruler of this house.\"\n * Digital Age: In internet slang, it is often written in lowercase without\n   periods (aka) and is used rapidly in tweets and captions to provide context\n   or rebranding info.\n\n\n","date_published":"2026-02-02T01:48:23.670Z","_microfeed":{"web_url":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/i/also-know-as-F25cU-DCnO0/","json_url":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/i/F25cU-DCnO0/json/","rss_url":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/i/F25cU-DCnO0/rss/","guid":"F25cU-DCnO0","status":"published","itunes:episodeType":"full","date_published_short":"Sun Feb 01 2026","date_published_ms":1769996903670}}],"_microfeed":{"microfeed_version":"0.1.5","base_url":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev","categories":[{"name":"Technology"}],"subscribe_methods":[{"name":"RSS","type":"rss","url":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/rss/","image":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/assets/brands/subscribe/rss.png","enabled":true,"editable":false,"id":"05wolTcdavQ"},{"name":"JSON","type":"json","url":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/json/","image":"https://home-aka-tw.pages.dev/assets/brands/subscribe/json.png","enabled":true,"editable":false,"id":"dZmC7xZBnga"}],"description_text":"[https://earth-cdn.aka.tw/home-aka-tw/production/media/rich-editor/channels/H6wWTaAeuzv/image-858d379545035bd969332f8593fcb2da.png]\n\nAlso Known As (AKA) is a phrase used to indicate alternative names, aliases, or\nidentities for a person, place, or entity.","copyright":"©2026","itunes:type":"episodic","items_sort_order":"newest_first"}}