bleg
English
WOTD – 20 November 2012
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /blɛɡ/
Audio (AU) (file) - Rhymes: -ɛɡ
Etymology 1
Unknown
Etymology 2
Blend of blog + beg.[1] British-born American far-right political commentator, writer, journalist and computer programmer John Derbyshire claims to have coined the verb in 2002,[2] although earlier usage may have occurred.
Noun
bleg (plural blegs)
- (Internet slang) An entry on a blog requesting information or contributions.
- I posted a bleg in the hope of learning more about local tourism.
- 2010 September 9, James Wolcott, “A Grammar of Motives*”, in Vanity Fair, archived from the original on 14 January 2013:
- Last time I looked, The QOR Club was a shuttered ghost town, and Jeff Goldstein is still doing monthly blegs to pay for the capital letters required to proclaim OUTLAW! at the end of his sporadic posts.
- 2012, Elizabeth Kantor, The Jane Austen Guide to Happily Ever After, Regnery Publishing, Inc., →ISBN, acknowledgments section, page 267:
- This book was crowdsourced among many friends, who helped me to new insights about love in the twenty-first century and into Jane Austen; answered frantic Facebook blegs for sources of quotations I couldn't find; […]
Verb
bleg (third-person singular simple present blegs, present participle blegging, simple past and past participle blegged)
- (Internet slang) To create an entry on a blog requesting information or contributions.
- That guy will bleg on the most unusual topics.
- 2008 May 18, “Strange looks and funny lines from the past week”, in Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
- The Freakonomics blog posted a "bleg" from "Yale Book of Quotations" editor Fred Shapiro, in which Shapiro blegged for modern proverbs.
- 2009 November 30, John J. Miller, “Novels of the Right, cont.”, in National Review Online:
- About ten days ago, I blegged for comments about great conservative novels — NRO readers now have posted more than 200 entries here [hyperlink redacted].
- 2009 August 7, Curtis Brainard, “It’s Tanking; I’m Teaching…”, in Columbia Journalism Review:
- Zimmer had "blegged" (that’s right, begged on his blog) his readers to help him compile a number of book and article titles for inclusion in that list, and they "did not disappoint."
- 2010 April 15, Iain Murray, “Chicagoan Voting System!”, in National Review Online:
- Yesterday, I shamelessly blegged people to vote for my son in a Parents magazine cutest kid contest.
See also
References
- Ben Zimmer (2010 November 11) “Web”, in The New York Times Magazine: “The vowel of blog can mutate, as when law blogs are called blawgs or requests via blog posts are called blegs (combining blog and beg).”
- John Derbyshire (2002 August 1) “July Diary”, in National Review Online, archived from the original on 2002-10-19: “The verb "to bleg" — coined, I believe, by yours truly — means "to use your blog to beg for assistance from readers.")”
Anagrams
Danish
Etymology 1
From Old Norse bleikr, from Proto-Germanic *blaikaz. Related to blege.
Inflection
Inflection of bleg | |||
---|---|---|---|
Positive | Comparative | Superlative | |
Indefinte common singular | bleg | blegere | blegest2 |
Indefinite neuter singular | blegt | blegere | blegest2 |
Plural | blege | blegere | blegest2 |
Definite attributive1 | blege | blegere | blegeste |
1) When an adjective is applied predicatively to something definite, the corresponding "indefinite" form is used. 2) The "indefinite" superlatives may not be used attributively. |
Etymology 2
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
Romanian
Etymology
Borrowed from Old Church Slavonic благъ (blagŭ), from Proto-Slavic *bolgъ (“good”). Compare Serbo-Croatian blag.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bleɡ/
Scots
Alternative forms
- bleget
References
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