bingeable
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]bingeable (comparative more bingeable, superlative most bingeable)
- On which one can binge.
- 2015 October 3, Terrence Rafferty, “New Twists for the TV Plot, as Viewer Habits Change”, in New York Times[1]:
- Maybe the bingeable series will become television’s preferred mode of storytelling, and maybe it will simply get stranger and stranger until it goes away: The sheer berserkness of “Sense8,” the Wachowski siblings’ globe-trotting Netflix soap opera, suggests that a certain fin de siècle decadence may already be setting in.
- 2024 October 5, Jessica Grose, “‘Nobody Wants This’ Pits Jewish Women Against ‘Shiksas.’ Nobody Wins.”, in The New York Times[2], New York, N.Y.: The New York Times Company, →ISSN, →OCLC:
- As I tore through the 10 episodes of this (admittedly) very bingeable show, I had the dawning realization that it seems to hate not only Jewish women.
Translations
[edit]suitable for bingeing, or binge-watching
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