0 to give something or someone a particular name, especially describing what you think of it, him, or her: --
She was dubbed by the newspapers "the Angel of Death".
1 to give a man the rank of knight, an honour given by a British king or queen, in a special ceremony that involves touching his shoulders with a sword: --
2 to change the sounds and speech on a film or television programme, especially to a different language: --
3 a style of music or poetry connected with reggae in which the main part of the tune is removed and various special effects are added --
4 to give something or someone a particular name, esp. describing what you think of that person or thing: --
5 to use different voices, sounds, or images in a movie, television program, recording, etc., to replace others made originally or as added parts: --
As indicated above, there are two kinds of programmes which we can dub reality shows.
Any element of business acumen or profit-seeking effort was dubbed ulanguzi (conmanship).
This gave birth to various small specialist labels which reissued 78s dubbed onto vinyl albums, as well as new recordings by recently rediscovered blues singers.
The crusade against out-door relief, as contemporaries dubbed it, soon turned into 'a form of brutal dispauperisation'.
Auditory prompts were dubbed onto the auditory channel of one of the video tapes.
The set of all such interactions carried out by proteins encoded in a genome has been dubbed the interactome.
A method of obtaining all kinds of noise, while reducing the somewhat boring static behaviour of the pure noise types, is dubbed atomic noise.
I therefore dubbed the item "spurious" (that is, lacking authenticity in origin) and turned to other data to evaluate the matter.