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View synonyms for bing

bing

1

[ bing ]

noun

, British Dialect.
  1. a heap or pile.


Bing

2

[ bing ]

noun

  1. Sir Rudolf, 1902–97, English opera impresario born in Austria; in the U.S. 1949–97.
  2. a male given name.

bing

3

[ bing ]

verb (used without object)

, Obsolete.
  1. to go.

Bing

4

[ bing ]

noun

  1. a variety of dark red or blackish sweet cherry.

bing

1

/ bɪŋ /

noun

  1. dialect.
    a heap or pile, esp of spoil from a mine


Bing

2

/ bɪŋ /

noun

  1. a popular search engine on the internet

verb

  1. to search for (something on the internet) using Bing

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Word History and Origins

Origin of bing1

1275–1325; Middle English < Old Norse bingr bunk, bin

Origin of bing2

First recorded in 1560–70; origin uncertain

Origin of bing3

An Americanism dating back to 1920–25

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Word History and Origins

Origin of bing1

C16: from Old Norse bingr heap

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Example Sentences

It would scale up its Bing search engine, it would sign up for the code, it would pay up for journalism.

From Time

Bing is also a leading search engine, and is likely to have the resources to win in all EU territories if it so desired.

The platform supports major PPC platforms including Google, Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, and Bing.

That’s according to an announcement last week from Microsoft Bing.

The new metrics include crawl requests, crawl errors, and indexed pages — all of which are not really directly related to the performance of your search results in Microsoft Bing.

A “friend” reports from Washington state: Yes, the legal pot is of the (ba-da-bing) highest quality.

I remember my sister being mindblown that Bing Crosby and David Bowie were singing “The Little Drummer Boy” together.

Sunai accuses the military of “grab[bing] power with very lame justification.”

The stars kept coming: Bing Crosby, Gary Cooper, Merle Oberon.

Now He Who Was Chandler Bing is set to star, co-write, and executive produce an update of The Odd Couple for CBS.

Bing tea grows on a different shrub, the leaves of which are thicker and larger than those of other kinds.

At last an old sailor said, "There's a little boat a-bob-bing up and down out there, and I think it has two little chaps in it."

The child had for a long while after their coming, constantly repeated at every meal "Dinah, bing milk."

And then the boy gets up quicker than he fell and jerks out his little pearl-handle, and—bing!

Man's first interstellar trip had taken nearly five years at sublight velocities, and bing!

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tortuous

[tawr-choo-uhs ]

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Binet-Simon scalebinge