The AI-powered English dictionary
A video-sharing website. examples
plural YouTubes
(neologism) Any website that allows users to upload content, particularly YouTube itself. quotations
None of this is to suggest that academic libraries should turn their websites into a YouTube or Facebook in which our user communities would create all the content, […]
2007, Steven J. Bell, John D. Shank, Academic librarianship by design
There is all kinds of stuff that people post there- some of it is entertaining, some is actually useful as a template for studying or for business...it is sort of like a YouTube for documents.
2008, Bradley L. Jones, Web 2.0 Heroes
(neologism, informal) A small video that can be viewed online, particularly one hosted on YouTube. quotations
Then it's a YouTube of some kid trying to play "Radar Love" on a cheap guitar using only his feet, […]
2007, Andy Ihnatko, iPhone Fully Loaded
Not too long ago, there was a YouTube of you two brawling. How did the musical collaboration happen?
2009 March, Valerie McQueen, “Bring me the Horizon”, in Revolver
(uncountable) Collectively, the users of YouTube; especially the content creator's viewers. examples
third-person singular simple present YouTubes, present participle YouTubing, simple past and past participle YouTubed
(neologism, transitive) To upload a video of something to YouTube. quotations
The revolution will not be televised. It will be YouTubed.
2007 February 5, “Why YouTube gets my vote for political punditry”, in Guardian Unlimited
(neologism, transitive) To search for and view on YouTube. quotations
Inquiry elicited that he was a pop singer. I YouTubed him, revealing another ghastly microphone-gripping, anguished nasal wailer.
2015 April 21, Bob Jones, “Appetite for quirky fulfilled”, in Wanganui Chronicle
If you don't know me, YouTube me, because soon the whole world is going to know me.
2017 July 20, Sammy Guevara, Impact Wrestling