Learn English – Is “for short” correct

american-englishgrammaticality

In conversation I used the phrase "for short" in the context:

"I will call you blank for short."

I know I've heard the phrase before, but I'm wondering if it is actually acceptable English? If not, what is the correct alternative?

EDIT for clarification:

The structure of the phrase seems uncommon to me (maybe I'm wrong). The preposition-adjective structure doesn't seem to have many examples. However, the reverse structure seems to have multiple examples.

Best Answer

OED definition 21 B I 1c under short says...

for short: as an abbreviation.

Their first citation is 1845, but it's perhaps worth pointing out that two out of their three citations have the idiomatic term in 'scare quotes'. So although OED don't actually say it's informal, colloquial, I think it's fair to assume it's in that general area.

As per these examples from thefreedictionary, there's also the "reverse" form...

He's called Ed for short.
Ed is short for Edward.