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binge-watcher
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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English
Etymology
From binge-watch + -er.
Noun
binge-watcher (plural binge-watchers)
- One who binge-watches a television programme.
- 2012 August 12, William Loeffler, “Are you a binge TVer?”, in Pittsburgh Tribune-Review:
- The market is adjusting to binge-watchers. Family Video has seasons of "24," "Prison Break" and "Boston Legal" available on DVD.
- 2014 February 18, William Wun, “‘House of Cards’ finds avid audience in China”, in The Washington Post:
- But its in-house translators have raced to append Chinese subtitles, finishing Chinese captions for two new episodes a day since then. That hasn’t stopped some binge-watchers from racing ahead.
- 2014 May 6, James Rampton, “24: Live Another Day – Kiefer Sutherland on the return of Jack Bauer”, in The Independent:
- The un-killable Counter Terrorist Unit agent Jack Bauer, who in the interim has remained hugely popular with DVD "binge-watchers", returns after a four-year hiatus to try to foil another terrorist plot that threatens to bring about the end of Western civilisation as we know it.
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French
Etymology 1
Borrowed from English binge-watcher.
Pronunciation
Noun
binge-watcher m (plural binge-watchers, feminine binge-watcheuse)
Etymology 2
Borrowed from English binge-watch + -er.
Pronunciation
Verb
- (colloquial) to binge-watch
Conjugation
Conjugation of binge-watcher (see also Appendix:French verbs)
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