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screen time

or screen·time

[ skreen tahym ]

noun

  1. the amount of time devoted to a particular actor, topic, plot line, etc., in a film or TV show:

    The female characters got less screen time than the male characters in all the film festival nominations.

  2. Digital Technology. the amount of time a person spends watching or interacting with content on the screen of a computer, phone, TV, gaming console, etc.:

    What's the maximum amount of screen time recommended for children under two?



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Word History and Origins

Origin of screen time1

First recorded in 1915–20, and in 1990–95 screen time fordef 2

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Example Sentences

There are other ways we can describe our tech relationships—as “habits,” for example—that make our screen time feel like an aspect of our lives we can gradually change instead of a toxin that must be expelled.

We see some students who have become worrisomely tethered to screen time during the closure.

This framing conflates digital screen time to video games, which are two different things.

In children, excessive screen time has been linked to developmental delays and behavioral issues.

So Yurich launched a website to give other parents resources and inspiration to replace screen time with outdoor time.

As with so many things, keeping screen time in moderate amounts seems key.

And, of course, it recommends keeping screen time limited, so as not to supplant other, real-world play and exploration.

As far as the characters these actors will play, or how much screen time they'll have, well, that remains largely a mystery.

Judi Dench won for her five minutes of screen time in Shakespeare in Love, but far be it from me to poo-poo a Dench win.

That comes out to an astonishing $8,333 per second of screen time, or roughly $500,000 a minute.

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