Appearance
See also: Facebook
English
Etymology
From face + book, likely modelled after namebook.
Pronunciation
Noun
facebook (plural facebooks)
- A reference book or electronic directory containing the photographs and names of various individuals.
- 2002, Ben Mezrich, Bringing Down the House:
- He had gotten the call from the casino-a client who had recognized them from the facebook-and had flown down to the Bahamas to teach them a lesson.
- A college publication distributed at the start of the academic year by university administrations with the intention of helping students become acquainted with each other.
- The shipment of facebooks will be distributed to the freshmen during orientation and move-in-week.
- 2001, Jonathan Franzen, The Corrections:
- In the last month, since he’d embarked on projects like digitally scanning Melissa Paquette’s face from a freshman facebook and suturing her head to obscene downloaded images and tinkering with these images pixel by pixel (and the hours did fly by when you were tinkering with pixels), he’d read no books at all.
- 2002, Ben Mezrich, Bringing Down the House:
- Kevin was surprised to see his own face on the card. It was an authentic California ID under the name Oliver Chen. "Where'd you get the picture?" Kevin asked. "Your MIT facebook."
- 2003, Steve Hofstetter, Student Body Shots: A Sarcastic Look at the Best 4-6 Years of Your Life:
- There is no interests section in the facebook. You know why? No one wants to flip through a book to find out which girls play chess.
Synonyms
- (a book containing pictures of faces): mug book
Derived terms
Translations
a reference book or electronic directory
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a college publication
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See also
- yearbook (traditionally published at the end of the academic year)
Verb
facebook (third-person singular simple present facebooks, present participle facebooking, simple past and past participle facebooked)
- Alternative letter-case form of Facebook
- 2019, Gretchen McCulloch, chapter 6, in Because Internet: Understanding the New Rules of Language, Riverhead Books, →ISBN:
- A less subtle way of navigating the relationship between the public and the obscure is found in subtweeting or vaguebooking (vague facebooking), the art of posting elliptically about a social situation without naming names.