verb
[with object]1Upload a video of (someone or something) to the video-sharing website YouTube.
‘Obama's inaugural will be the first to be YouTubed.’- ‘The tape was discovered by schoolmates, who YouTubed it.’
- ‘Please tell me that someone has YouTubed a video of Bill Murray driving a golf car through Stockholm.’
- ‘If there was such a recipe shared digitally, somewhere someone would have blogged about it, tweeted about it, Facebook'd it, YouTubed it.’
- ‘He also sends along a link to a YouTubed audio interview with Kubrick that is well worth a listen, if you haven't heard it.’
- ‘A recently YouTubed copy of the trailer was pulled after a complaint.’
- 1.1Search for or watch on YouTube.‘I went back and YouTubed the show’
- ‘I happily deposited my load, unfolded my wireless and merrily surfed, blogged and YouTubed away while my delicates swirled and dried to the leisurely soundtrack of my iTunes.’
- ‘The extraordinary rendition of Bohemian Rhapsody by the competition winners and runners up plus a gaggle of drunken Brits who crashed the stage really has to be YouTubed to be believed.’
- ‘You know, it sort of got YouTubed all around the beltway and people made a lot of it, but it went away.’
- ‘I YouTubed the band.’
- ‘The film, for those of you who haven't feverishly YouTubed it yet, is an unpleasant rant.’
- ‘I just YouTubed the video to that song of hers.’
- ‘It's an amazing, tragic story of a player who, having just YouTubed him, I can safely say was like no other in the history of football.’
Origin
Early 21st century from YouTube, the proprietary name of the video-sharing website.
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