Jump to content

Citations:tebowing

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English citations of tebowing

getting down on one knee and praying to celebrate success

[edit]
  • 2011 October 27, Lindsay Jones, “The Story Behind the “Tebowing” Craze”, in The Denver Post[1], →ISSN, retrieved 2011-11-05:
    Here’s Broncos linebacker Von Miller Tebowing in a Tebow jersey. [] The other was a picture from a child Tebowing while going through cancer treatment.
  • 2011 December 12, Tom Weir, “'Tebowing' becomes officially recognized as a word”, in USA Today[2], →ISSN:
    The Global Language Monitor website says it acknowledges that the word Tebowing — the act of taking a knee in prayer during an athletic contest — is now part of the English language.
  • 2011 December 15, Cork Gaines, “People Are Going Nuts Over The 'Tebowing' Fathead”, in Business Insider[3]:
    Earlier this week, Fathead introduced a Tim Tebow fathead in which Tebow is seen "Tebowing."
  • 2013 February 23, “Tebow to Appear at Other Events in Texas After Withdrawing From ...”, in Christian Post:
    The outspoken evangelical athlete is known for "tebowing" on the field to give honor to God.
  • 2013 October 24, “the latest social media craze”, in Sydney Morning Herald:
    Then there was tebowing. Then came owling. Now the latest meme to dominate social media is "mamming".
  • 2020, Harmony Bench, Perpetual Motion: Dance, Digital Cultures, and the Common
    [] but, like planking, horsemanning, Tebowing, Hadoukening, and other viral photography memes, as a genre of public performance, dance in public is greatly facilitated by the channels of distribution that social media offer, []