释义 |
Definition of Twitterverse in English: Twitterversenounˈtwɪtəvəːsˈtwɪdərˌvərs the Twitterverseinformal Users of the social media application Twitter, considered collectively. the Twitterverse eupted in outrage Example sentencesExamples - Nine months after taking the Twitterverse by storm, the Prime Minister has turned his hand to blogging.
- In the Twitterverse, the number of your followers, like a website's click-through rate, demonstrate online wantedness and potency.
- If the Twitterverse has so far passed you by, it's probably best described as a kind of mobile micro-blogging.
- Many fade away, others stick it out and are seeing the benefits as the 'Twitterverse'—the online world of Twitter users—expands.
- Still, Darr said he can't believe the controversy generated in the Twitterverse, blogosphere, and academia, with some accusing the school of inflicting "a terrible thing and an infringement upon people's rights."
- Twitterverse: If you were building a news website from ground up what would be the most important things to include?
- "I'm almost crying," he lamented to the Twitterverse.
- The Twitterverse and other social media have been harnessed in less nefarious ways by Torontonians itching to have their say on the strike.
- Bringing us back down to earth (or, rather, the Twitterverse), the beauty and health director has this to say about the website.
- Maybe they were too busy, but maybe there was also a lot of pressure not to screw up, an easy enough thing to do in real life but even more so in the Twitterverse.
- The big and trivial news rises to the top of the Twitterverse.
- It's hardly surprising that when, earlier this month, Twitter's rock-star-like founders, @ev and @biz, tried to change this policy such that semi-private conversations could be semi-private once more, the Twitterverse shouted them down.
- He immediately lets the Twitterverse know the tumor has been isolated and it is penetrating very deep into the kidney.
OriginEarly 21st century: blend of Twitter, the proprietary name of the social media service, and -verse. Definition of Twitterverse in US English: Twitterversenounˈtwidərˌvərsˈtwɪdərˌvərs the Twitterverseinformal Users of the social media application Twitter, considered collectively. the Twitterverse eupted in outrage Example sentencesExamples - He immediately lets the Twitterverse know the tumor has been isolated and it is penetrating very deep into the kidney.
- Maybe they were too busy, but maybe there was also a lot of pressure not to screw up, an easy enough thing to do in real life but even more so in the Twitterverse.
- If the Twitterverse has so far passed you by, it's probably best described as a kind of mobile micro-blogging.
- "I'm almost crying," he lamented to the Twitterverse.
- Twitterverse: If you were building a news website from ground up what would be the most important things to include?
- The big and trivial news rises to the top of the Twitterverse.
- Many fade away, others stick it out and are seeing the benefits as the 'Twitterverse'—the online world of Twitter users—expands.
- The Twitterverse and other social media have been harnessed in less nefarious ways by Torontonians itching to have their say on the strike.
- Still, Darr said he can't believe the controversy generated in the Twitterverse, blogosphere, and academia, with some accusing the school of inflicting "a terrible thing and an infringement upon people's rights."
- Bringing us back down to earth (or, rather, the Twitterverse), the beauty and health director has this to say about the website.
- In the Twitterverse, the number of your followers, like a website's click-through rate, demonstrate online wantedness and potency.
- Nine months after taking the Twitterverse by storm, the Prime Minister has turned his hand to blogging.
- It's hardly surprising that when, earlier this month, Twitter's rock-star-like founders, @ev and @biz, tried to change this policy such that semi-private conversations could be semi-private once more, the Twitterverse shouted them down.
OriginEarly 21st century: blend of Twitter, the proprietary name of the social media application, and -verse. |