单词 | dotcom |
释义 | dotcomn. 1. With prefixed word or words, forming a URL or email address. Also: (the name of) the com domain (domain n. Additions b) used in URLs and email addresses, originally intended for use by commercial organizations; = com n. ΚΠ 1994 Newsday (N.Y.) 5 Apr. b29/2 If I were telling someone that address I'd say: ‘quit at newsday dot com.’ 1999 Domain names 11 Feb. in alt.homepages.designtips.uk (Usenet newsgroup) Both will help you register with Internic (for a dot com domain) for 35 USD per annum and can host your site from about 10 pounds a month (or less). 2015 M. Helliwell Business Plus Level 3 98/1 Let me repeat that: chas minus sands at icloud dot com. 2. A business that provides products or services wholly or mainly via the internet, esp. one having an internet address ending with the suffix .com. Also: the internet as a business medium. Frequently attributive. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > business affairs > a business or company > [noun] > other types of company incorporation1530 acquisitor1668 private company?1711 private practice1724 public company1730 trading house1760 acquiror1789 in-company1791 public corporation1796 company1800 subsidiary company1823 proprietary company1824 stock-company1827 trust company1827 subsidiary1828 concessionaire1839 commandite1844 statutory company1847 parent company1854 mastership1868 state enterprise1886 Pty.1904 asset class1931 acquirer1950 parent1953 growth company1959 spin-off1959 non-profit1961 shell1964 not-for-profit1969 vehicle1971 spin-out1972 startup1975 greenfield1982 large-cap1982 monoline1984 small cap1984 mid-cap1988 multidomestic1989 dotcom1996 1996 Internet World (Westport, Conn.) Nov. a6/2 A broad discussion of what's around the corner for dot.coms. What effect will ‘dumb-delivery’ devices have as they make the Web more accessible to the home market? 1999 Daily Tel. 28 Apr. 1/7 (advt.) The winning team in dot-com is Sun. We've dot-commed Man U..the UK..the world—bringing the culture of dot-com to enterprises large and small. 2000 Sunday Times 23 July (Business section) 16/6 Cybercrime is on the up—not all dotcom millionaires aim to make their fortunes through anything quite as wholesome as a stock-market listing. 3. British colloquial (frequently humorous). (chiefly in form .com). Used as an intensifier after adjectives to refer to the emotional or physical state of a person. [Probably after Confused.com, the proprietary name of a British financial services comparison website, founded in 2001.] ΚΠ 2007 @Sleekmaus 23 Dec. in twitter.com (O.E.D. Archive) Bored bored bored.com. 2013 @Sallysmith061 15 Dec. in twitter.com (O.E.D. Archive) It's been a very busy weekend. Knackered.com. 2017 @wellnicepops 29 Nov. in twitter.com (O.E.D. Archive) Congrats again Mark!!! Delighted.com. Compounds dot com bubble n. now historical an economic bubble which occurred during the latter half of the 1990's as a result of speculative investment in internet-based companies, and peaked around 2000. ΚΠ 1999 Austral. Financial Rev. (Nexis) 19 Aug. 18 Australia's internet stocks finished largely down on Friday, ending a rollercoaster week in which many began to question whether the so-called ‘dot com bubble’ may have finally burst. 2009 T. Footman Noughties Introd. p. xiv The bursting of the dotcom bubble caused some short-term anguish in the markets. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2019; most recently modified version published online March 2022). dotcomv. 1. transitive. To subject continually to references to internet businesses (which typically have an internet address ending with the suffix .com). rare and now disused. ΚΠ 1996 Maine Sunday Telegram (Portland, Maine) 9 June 1 g What with baseball scores, stock market reports and dot coms running across the bottom of our TV screens, there's hardly room left for the picture. We are doomed to being dot commed to death. 2. transitive (chiefly in passive). To enable (a person or company) to do business over the internet; to provide with an internet address, esp. one ending with the suffix .com. Also reflexive. ΚΠ 1997 St. Louis (Missouri) Post-Disp. 27 Feb. 41/3 Later Dick and Jane bombed. They're making a comeback. They've just been dot-commed. 1999 Forbes 8 Mar. 101/1 It's the foundation for ‘dot-comming’ ourselves. It's what the new networked economy is all about. 2000 New Straits Times (Malaysia) (Nexis) 7 June (Business Online section) 36 A programme designed to provide customers with the expertise to get their businesses dotcommed quickly. 2011 @antiroom 3 June in twitter.com (O.E.D. Archive) So it appears we are now dotcommed. www.theantiroom.com. 3. transitive (in passive). To be driven out of business or adversely affected by companies doing business over the internet. ΚΠ 2000 N.Z. Herald 31 Mar. (Business section) 2/5 Things are changing by the week as companies try to avoid being ‘dot commed’ by nimble newcomers who do not carry their overheads. 2003 R. Krovi in C. V. Brown & H. Topi IS Managem. Handbk. (ed. 8) l. 627 Brick-and-mortar companies—which have always been faced with the danger of being ‘Amazoned’ or ‘dot.commed’—have responded in unique ways. 2015 Financial Times (Electronic ed.) 30 Sept. Memories of the last tech bubble, when big companies worried about being ‘dotcommed’ by internet start-ups that wanted to take their trade, have faded. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2019; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1994v.1996 |
随便看 |
英语词典包含1132095条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。