Google is a verb.
Isn't it kinda crazy that a company/website has become a generic verb; i.e. I googled kids' programming languages. (Yeah, I had to do that.)
Also nouns, like Xerox and Kleenex.
Do you know of others?
Last edited by scimonster (2011-04-13 12:47:07)
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cuddlycub wrote:
really
well you know what else is a verb
close this topic
i think i may like that one better
Be quiet. This is interesting, and no, that is not a verb, and yes, that is interesting. What do you think will come next?
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Necromaster wrote:
cuddlycub wrote:
really
well you know what else is a verb
close this topic
i think i may like that one betterBe quiet. This is interesting, and no, that is not a verb, and yes, that is interesting. What do you think will come next?
![]()
come next
thats a verb
tumbleupon is a social network and a verb
Last edited by cuddlycub (2011-04-13 10:40:12)

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cuddlycub wrote:
Necromaster wrote:
cuddlycub wrote:
really
well you know what else is a verb
close this topic
i think i may like that one betterBe quiet. This is interesting, and no, that is not a verb, and yes, that is interesting. What do you think will come next?
![]()
come next
thats a verb
tumbleupon is a social network and a verb
Actually, "come", is the verb of that sentence, not next. Next is an adverb.
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Hey, this isn't grammar discussion, at least it wasn't meant to be. This is Google got so famous that it is a generic term.
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Why should I care if Google is a verb? Scratch is too.
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Alternatives wrote:
Why should I care if Google is a verb? Scratch is too.
Well, scratch was a word before MIT made the programming language. Google wasn't a verb until Google became famous.
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scimonster wrote:
Alternatives wrote:
Why should I care if Google is a verb? Scratch is too.
Well, scratch was a word before MIT made the programming language. Google wasn't a verb until Google became famous.
Yo, I know what google is, you don't have to link to it
EDIT: Google was always a verb and a word by the way, google means to stare intensely.
Last edited by Alternatives (2011-04-13 12:46:05)
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Alternatives wrote:
scimonster wrote:
Alternatives wrote:
Why should I care if Google is a verb? Scratch is too.
Well, scratch was a word before MIT made the programming language. Google wasn't a verb until Google became famous.
Yo, I know what google is, you don't have to link to it
Yeah, who doesn't?
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Alternatives wrote:
Why should I care if Google is a verb? Scratch is too.
And so is just about every other programming language.
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scimonster wrote:
Alternatives wrote:
scimonster wrote:
Well, scratch was a word before MIT made the programming language. Google wasn't a verb until Google became famous.Yo, I know what google is, you don't have to link to it
Yeah, who doesn't?
![]()
Whoa, that's a pretty neat search engine you found. I may use it in the future
I say that I should tweet this information. (That's another one)
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blazerv82 wrote:
scimonster wrote:
Alternatives wrote:
Yo, I know what google is, you don't have to link to it
Yeah, who doesn't?
![]()
Whoa, that's a pretty neat search engine you found. I may use it in the future
I say that I should tweet this information. (That's another one)
Tweet was a word before...
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Alternatives wrote:
scimonster wrote:
Alternatives wrote:
Why should I care if Google is a verb? Scratch is too.
Well, scratch was a word before MIT made the programming language. Google wasn't a verb until Google became famous.
Yo, I know what google is, you don't have to link to it
EDIT: Google was always a verb and a word by the way, google means to stare intensely.
I thought that's "goggle."
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Necromaster wrote:
blazerv82 wrote:
scimonster wrote:
Yeah, who doesn't?![]()
Whoa, that's a pretty neat search engine you found. I may use it in the future
I say that I should tweet this information. (That's another one)Tweet was a word before...
![]()
True.
But did people say that "We'll be tweeting during the show" before Twitter ever got popular? Not anyone I know of did.
I guess I can't explain it very well. Oh well. Figures.
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blazerv82 wrote:
I guess I can't explain it very well. Oh well. Figures.
What you mean is that "tweet" of course didn't refer to a Twitter-related action before the site existed, but the bird's tweeting itself.
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maybe he's getting something everytime he links to this bizzare search engine he has stumbleupon. i should tweet this and facebook it.
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Was blog before the internet?
Ha, now I'm "miscing" this.
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I think I heard somewhere that once the majority of the population of the country (England) uses a slang word for 5 years + it becomes a generic word, and is therefore place into the next dictionary (or an upto date one)
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FlexiStudio wrote:
I think I heard somewhere that once the majority of the population of the country (England) uses a slang word for 5 years + it becomes a generic word, and is therefore place into the next dictionary (or an upto date one)
like Ginormous. (giant + enormous)
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No way, its... well... I guess it can be used as a verb AND a noun. You have to change the form of the word though.
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CloneCommando1 wrote:
No way, its... well... I guess it can be used as a verb AND a noun. You have to change the form of the word though.
What do you mean?
What is a good HTML tutorial? IDK, google it.
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scimonster wrote:
CloneCommando1 wrote:
No way, its... well... I guess it can be used as a verb AND a noun. You have to change the form of the word though.
What do you mean?
What is a good HTML tutorial? IDK, google it.
He means that it is both a noun & a verb in different contexts:
Example: I am going to the website, Google/b], to [b]Google information on kid's programming websites
In that sentence the fist 'Google' used was a noun, then i used it again as a verb!
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