bloggy

English

Etymology

From blog +‎ -y.

Adjective

bloggy (comparative bloggier, superlative bloggiest)

  1. (informal) Having the characteristics of a blog; resembling a blog.
    • 2006, Debbie Weil, The corporate blogging book:
      You can still be professional, but let your personality seep in. If you're managing the blog, give your blog writer time to develop a bloggy rhythm and writing voice. Either way, gauge the reaction from readers or other bloggers.
    • 2007, Andrea Fatona, Aruna Srivastava, Rinaldo Walcott, “Bring It Back: Thinking the Ethno-Politics of Identity Again”, in Fuse Magazine, volume 30, Toronto, Ont.: Arton’s Publishing, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 18:
      I feel entirely defeated, myself, however, in how we engage in such a practice in the face of the vacuous (and I use the word in response to both your senses of analytical categories like class being “empty” or “evacuated”) sameness of responses to and critiques of the events at Virginia Tech and the excruciating analyses of Cho Seung-Hui which (at my last investigation) were curiously silent about the ethno-political and about racism in its most obvious, bloggiest forms.
    • 2008 March 23, David Kamp, “Permalinks”, in The New York Times Book Review[1], New York, N.Y.: The New York Times Company, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 10 December 2008:
      It is, dare I say it, too preoccupied with being respectably booky rather than wildly bloggy.
    • 2023 October 3, Margaret Lyons, “For This ‘Jeopardy!’ Champ, Winning Came Before the Buzzer”, in The New York Times Book Review[2], New York, N.Y.: The New York Times Company, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 3 October 2023:
      In “Question,” Schneider bounces between bloggier, jokier chapters (“Why in God’s Name Did They Make ‘Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue’?”) and more revealing, still jokey ones, about her gender transition and other formative experiences (“So if You’re Trans, Does That Mean You Like Guys?”).

Synonyms