Clues for the word "ALIAS"
We've had 329 crossword clues used for this word, and seen it 835 times in crosswords. It was last seen in Daily American crossword on December 30, 2024.
Definition of alias
- adv. - Otherwise; otherwise called; -- a term used in legal proceedings to connect the different names of any one who has gone by two or more, and whose true name is for any cause doubtful; as, Smith, alias Simpson.
- adv. - At another time.
- n. - A second or further writ which is issued after a first writ has expired without effect.
- n. - Another name; an assumed name.
Referring Clues
- You may assume it
- Another name
- The Jackal, e.g.
- Anonym
- George Sand, for one
- Name after a name
- Assumed name
- It may be assumed
- Spy's name, possibly
- Swindler's name, possibly
- Con's cover, of a sort
- What a thief might go by
- Also known as
- Rose by any other name?
- False "handle"
- Mata Hari was one
- Butch Cassidy, e.g.
- It's assumed
- Name on a "Wanted" poster
- Second name
- Smith, sometimes
- Cover
- Smith, perhaps
- Son of Sam, e.g.
- A criminal may go by it
- Stage name
- What a person may go under
- A criminal may have one
- Wanted poster info
- A thief may go under one
- Jennifer Garner spy series
- Rap sheet handle
- Something to go under
- Name on a police blotter
- Also called
- Criminal's creation
- Protective cover?
- Fugitive's creation
- Vacationing celeb's convenience
- TV spy series starring Jennifer Garner
- Chevalier de Seingalt, for Casanova
- Rap sheet word
- Popular spy show
- A thief might take one
- Name a criminal goes by
- Identity hider
- Fake identity
- Word on a wanted poster
- Criminal's "a k a" name
- False front
- Rap sheet info
- "Butch Cassidy" or "The Sundance Kid"
- Misleading moniker
- Incognito's aid
- The Sundance Kid, vis-à-vis Harry Longbaugh
- Word on a police blotter
- Nom de plume
- Assumed identity
- Police blotter entry
- "___ Smith and Jones" (TV oldie)
- Mark Twain or John Le Carre
- "___ Smith & Jones"
- George Sand or George Orwell
- Jennifer Garner TV series
- Wanted poster word
- Pseudonym
- False name
- Blotter word
- Smith or Jones, at times
- Smith, at times
- Wanted poster name
- Spy series directed by J .J. Abrams
- John Doe, perhaps
- Hood's pseudonym
- Butch Cassidy or The Sundance Kid
- Deceptive handle
- The Sundance Kid, for Harry Longabaugh
- John Smith, possibly
- Name in the No-Tell Motel registry, most likely
- Handle
- Fictitious name
- ABC series about spy Sydney Bristow
- It can be assumed
- Phony name
- Name registered at many an escort service
- Item on a forged document, perhaps
- Name on a rap sheet, perhaps
- Identity concealer
- False handle
- Rap sheet entry
- Series featuring agent Sydney Bristow
- Hood's handle
- Handle on a rap sheet
- Smith might be one
- ABC spy series
- Other handle
- Escapee's acquisition
- Fake handle
- Spy's assumption
- Literally, "at another time"
- Kirk Douglas, for one
- Second name?
- Rap-sheet name
- Rap-sheet entry
- Wanted-poster info
- Rap-sheet info
- Impostor's cover
- Alternate identity
- Rap sheet name, perhaps
- Alternate handle
- A thief may use one
- Alternate name
- Con's cover
- "America's Most Wanted" info
- Name in the No-Tell Motel registry
- Identity disguiser
- Jennifer Garner series
- What a con may assume
- Nom de guerre
- Fake handle?
- Something to go by
- A con artist may go by it
- Moniker
- Criminal's creation, perhaps
- Unreal name
- Criminal pseudonym
- Billy the Kid, to Henry McCarty
- Perp's red herring
- O. Henry, e.g.
- See 76-Across
- Billy the Kid, for Henry McCarty
- Kind of cover
- Wanted-poster datum
- Criminal's fake name
- "America's Most Wanted" info, sometimes
- What a crook might go by
- Phony handle
- Misleading handle
- Name after "a.k.a."
- Low profile maintainer
- Butch Cassidy or the Sundance Kid, e.g.
- "America's Most Wanted" info
- "___ Smith and Jones": 1970s TV Western
- AKA
- The Sundance Kid, e.g.
- Fake moniker
- Fugitive's assumption
- Literally, "at another time"
- "___ Smith and Jones": 1970s TV Western
- Misleading name
- Jennifer Garner drama
- Crooks pseudonym
- Rap sheet name, maybe
- A.k.a.
- Phony moniker
- Fake name
- Rap-sheet datum
- Police blotter datum
- Perp's cover
- Criminals and computer operators may use one
- Pen name
- Not the real name
- John Smith, maybe
- Crook's pseudonym
- Rap sheet item
- Rap-sheet item
- TV spy series
- Criminal's handle
- Pseudonym of a sort
- Wanted poster datum
- Name on a rap sheet
- False identity
- Something a thief might take
- John Smith may be one
- Name on a police blotter, maybe
- Possible substitute for "or"
- It may be proved in court
- Name on a spy's passport, perhaps
- Mark Twain, for one
- Police blotter name
- You could go under one
- Something to assume
- Fugitive's invention
- What a crook might go under
- Alter ego?
- Perp's fake name
- Carlos Danger, e.g.
- Crook's cover
- Bit of checkpoint deception
- "___ Smith and Jones": '70s TV Western
- 007, e.g.
- One may assume one
- "Wanted" poster name
- Blotter entry
- Rap sheet datum
- Ann Landers or Mark Twain
- Police profile datum
- Rap sheet name
- Spy's name, often
- Dossier cover?
- Cover name
- Blotter name
- Word on "Wanted" posters
- Police blotter info
- Name after 39-Down
- Aka follower
- "Wanted" poster entry
- ABC show that ended its fourth season with a car crash cliffhanger
- Crook's invention
- Name on a wanted poster
- Billy the Kid, e.g.
- What follows "aka"
- O. Henry or Mark Twain
- "Aka" kin
- AKA, to a criminal
- Criminal's cover, perhaps
- Second name, perhaps
- Criminal's false name
- "Doe" or "Roe," commonly
- El Chapo, to Joaquin Guzman
- "Otherwise known as" name
- Elia, to Lamb
- Booking term
- Identity-concealing name
- Crook's other name
- Pseudonym lead-in
- Many a rapper's name
- Deep Throat, to the Watergate informant
- Fake ID
- Margaret Atwood's "___ Grace"
- Criminal handle
- Cover-up name
- Show that follows Sydney Bristow
- Jennifer Garner "spy-fi" series
- Another name for a return voyage
- Alternative name in Australia sometimes
- Jennifer Garner spy-fi drama
- Another name for a person
- Bogus name
- False or assumed identity
- Cat Stevens, to Yusuf Islam
- Calif. Yo La Tengo label
- "More Than Words Can Say" band
- "Gloria, I think they got the ___" Laura Branigan
- Former Yo La Tengo label
- 1990's "More Than Words Can Say" band
- CA record label they use as a handle?
- "More Than Words Can Say" supergroup
- CA Yo La Tengo label
- Name adopted by one "Lisa", maybe
- One has to sail back using an assumed name
- Another name for the centre of Dakar
- A sheet hung up by Bonxie, perhaps
- Otherwise called a sail?
- Also called a torn sail
- Also known as Ali, possibly
- New name? Lisa shiftily takes one
- Tokyo Rose, e.g.
- Rap sheet listing
- Otherwise known as
- Cover of a sort
- Butch Cassidy was one
- A sail (anag)
- John Smith, often
- Wanted poster listing
- Wanted poster handle
- Spurious name
- Incognito traveler's invention
- Incognito traveler's need
- Alternative name for a rotated sail
- Smith and Jones, say, follow-ing a nautical royal rising
- Another name for animal, I assume
- Fugitive's fake name
- Billy the Kid, for one
- ID cover
- Eminem, to Marshall Mathers III
- Another name for a sail
- Harry the Heel or Lenny the Lip, e.g.
- False name as used in Dakar
- False ID
- What many an author assumes
- "Doe" or "Roe," perhaps
- "Buffalo Bill," for William Cody
- Alternative handle
- One of Kimble's many, on "The Fugitive"
- Invented identity
- False moniker
- Billy the Kid vis-à-vis Henry McCarty
- Pen name, e.g.
- Fugitive's moniker
- Aid for a fugitive
- What a criminal may assume
- Impostor's identity
- Name used by a 26-Across, perhaps
- A spy may go by one
- Also, in name only
- Spy's "name"
- Nominally you'll find a clue in central Dakar
- Doe, perhaps
- Sundance Kid, for one
- Nominally, it could be misleading
- Robert Galbraith, to J. K. Rowling
- Secondary handle
- Pseudonym of sorts
- "aka" name
- "A Lady" for Jane Austen, e.g.
- Anna Gram, say, for a wordsmith
- A computer hacker usually uses this
- Another name for a sail?
- Passing under the name of 'Aka'?
- Sasha Fierce, for Beyonce, e.g.
- Spy's alternate name
- Second name?
- Spy's fake identity
- Captain Marvel, for one
- Ron Rifkin spy series
- Otherwise called a sail?
- Pen name, for example
- TV spy drama of the early 2000s
- Cover story piece?
- A new identity as Ali, possibly
- Dame Edna, for Barry Humphries
- Spy series
- Protective cover?
- Name on a false document
- Second calling?
- Stage name, e.g.
- Lewis Carroll, for Charles Dodgson
- Fake ID?
Last Seen In
- Daily American - December 30, 2024
- Mirror Mini - December 06, 2024
- Daily Cryptic - December 04, 2024
- LA Times - November 29, 2024
- New York Times - November 20, 2024
- Mindfood Daily - November 17, 2024
- LA Times - November 11, 2024
- Mirror Daily - November 02, 2024
- Penny Dell Daily - October 22, 2024
- Family Time - October 20, 2024
- Penny Dell Daily - October 18, 2024
- King Syndicate - Thomas Joseph - October 14, 2024
- Evening Standard Cryptic - October 10, 2024
- New Zealand Herald - October 05, 2024
- LA Times - September 07, 2024
- New York Times - September 06, 2024
- LA Times - September 01, 2024
- King Syndicate - Thomas Joseph - August 28, 2024
- Evening Standard Easy - August 14, 2024
- USA Today - August 07, 2024
- New York Times - August 05, 2024
- LA Times - August 04, 2024
- Evening Standard Cryptic - August 01, 2024
- Penny Dell Daily - July 21, 2024
- Penny Dell Daily - July 13, 2024
- Evening Standard Easy - July 12, 2024
- Penny Dell Daily - July 09, 2024
- USA Today - July 09, 2024
- New York Times - July 07, 2024
- LA Times - July 03, 2024
- And in 805 more crossword puzzles...