crowdsource
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From crowd + source; more at crowdsourcing.
Verb
[edit]crowdsource (third-person singular simple present crowdsources, present participle crowdsourcing, simple past and past participle crowdsourced)
- To delegate a task to a large, diffuse group.
- 2009 August 30, William Safire, “Clunkers”, in New York Times[1]:
- And I sometimes “crowdsource,” asking for help in research from the Lexicographic Irregulars (like when I asked for sign-language suggestions for “thanks” and learned how the little Dutch boy felt when he pulled his finger out of the dike).