Citations:pibling

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English citations of pibling

2006 2010 2017 2018 2019
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 2006 July 12, friendofjack [username], “Updating the English language”, in LiveJournal[1], archived from the original on 2023-12-05:
    I'm stumped on (a) [________: aunt, uncle]. My only idea so far -- "pibling," for parent's sibling -- just won't fly. I don't think I could refer to any of my aunts or uncles as "piblings" and get away with it.
  • 2010 January 8, @kylerkelton, Twitter[2], retrieved 2023-12-04:
    Word of the day: "Piblings"-collective term for Uncles and Aunts. Thank you Cody for this insight.
  • 2017 May 23, Darren Bader, “High Line Art”, in e-flux[3], archived from the original on 23 May 2017:
    Are you someone's stepsibling, pibling, great grandfather, step father, mother, niece, aunt, brother, nibling, grandchild, grandmother, brother-in-law, great aunt, son, daughter, first cousin, or nephew?
  • 2018 November 1, J. Graham Ruby, Kevin M. Wright, Kristin A. Rand, Amir Kermany, Keith Noto, with Curtis, Don, Varner, Neal, Garrigan, Daniel, Slinkov, Dmitri, Dorfman, Ilya, and Granka, Julie M., “Estimates of the Heritability of Human Longevity Are Substantially Inflated due to Assortative Mating”, in Genetics[4], volume 210, number 3, →DOI, →ISSN, →PMID, archived from the original on 7 November 2018, pages 1109–1124:
    Plots of the pibling vs. pibling-in-law estimates for a as a function of birth-year offsets revealed no upward or downward trends across any gender combinations (Figure 6, D–F).
  • 2019 May, Diogo Marques, Tiago Guerreiro, Luis Carriço, Ivan Beschastnikh, Konstantin Beznosov, “Vulnerability & Blame: Making Sense of Unauthorized Access to Smartphones”, in CHI '19: Proceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems[5], Glasgow, Scotland: ACM Press, →DOI, →ISBN, archived from the original on 31 August 2020, pages 1–13:
    Relationships we coded as “family” only included very close ties: six parent-child relationships; two sibling relationships, and one pibling-child relationship.
  • 2019 July 11, James Introcaso, “Who Do You Know?”, in World Builder Blog[6], archived from the original on 31 August 2020:
    54 – 56 Pibling (such as an aunt or uncle)