Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Lessons learned on being a good netizen are useful in the real world as well.
He works with another "netizen" from Changchun who cannot be named.
The lines in the comics are funny and popular among the Chinese netizen.
The same year, a netizen lashed out at the group for singing too many covers over the course of their career.
Dear Netizen, You have just made a colossal fool of yourself.
The author acknowledges that she is a "Netizen", and questions her own objective stance due to this involvement.
The term Netizen is a portmanteau of the English words Internet and citizen.
A netizen called "Wujinger1" made the post.
As a netizen I'm concerned that we're slowly losing the 'Net Neutrality war.
One netizen dismissed the launch as "another prestige project that wastes manpower and money just for the National Day celebrations".
XP is gradually turning into a liability for the security concious netizen.
On January 30, 2009, a netizen on the forum "Tianya.
Netizen (April and May 2006)
Other terms roughly analogous with internaut are cybernaut and netizen, though each has its own connotation.
It is an award that goes to a Netizen, a blogger, online journalist, or cyber-dissident who has helped promote freedom of expression on the Internet.
These posts, leaked by a netizen who hacked his Myspace account, were taken out of context and severely misinterpreted by the Korean media.
The name of the website is a concatenation of Plan, as in the word, planning, and Netizen, a portmanteau of Internet and citizen.
APNIC plays a passive role, providing its service to both the criminal and upstanding netizen in a non-judgmental way.
A netizen, "Qoo" said that, " It is reasonable to raise the price otherwise there is no way for this kind of small restaurants to survive."
Jiang noted that a netizen said the movie would be associated with conflicts in Tibet and Xinjiang if it's screened in China.
Another netizen created a video parody, entitled Xedo Holocaust, and uploaded it to YouTube and other video-sharing websites.
Netizen (1996-1997) - The first website to cover a presidential election, featuring daily writing from John Heileman and Jon Katz, edited by David Weir.
One Japanese netizen noted that during the 1980s, the term Christmas cakes was commonly used to refer to women who were unmarried and beyond the national age average of married women.
Media Rants: Post Politics in the Digital Nation: A Netizen Takes on Washington and the Media Empire (1997)
The question was raised once again when a netizen posted a picture of a woman whom he claimed was Kim Bo-Min at Suwon World Cup Stadium.