Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun The role or status of a
celebrity .
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
Support
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Examples
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His celebrityhood, which is an invention of the media, dominating my films! "
GreenCine Daily 2009
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His celebrityhood, which is an invention of the media, dominating my films! "
GreenCine Daily 2009
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Alas, though, Dorgan and Brown went with the hard-core ludicrous claim, and so were promoted to laughingstock econoblogosphere celebrityhood.
Real Caricature, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty 2009
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That film had the effect of ennobling the paparazzo ideal while mourning a simpler, Internet-less era of celebrityhood.
HBO and Adam Grenier turn the camera on a kid paparazzo Hank Stuever 2010
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Alas, though, Dorgan and Brown went with the hard-core ludicrous claim, and so were promoted to laughingstock econoblogosphere celebrityhood.
Real Caricature, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty 2009
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He wanted her to do well, and was upset when she wasn't doing well, and was chafing at this whippersnapper Obama, who he doubtless resented both generationally and in the way that many stars resent one another beneath the surface camaraderie of celebrityhood.
William Bradley: The Last Clinton Melodrama? (And Other Sensationalist Game Change Gossip) 2010
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He wanted her to do well, and was upset when she wasn't doing well, and was chafing at this whippersnapper Obama, who he doubtless resented both generationally and in the way that many stars resent one another beneath the surface camaraderie of celebrityhood.
The Last Clinton Melodrama? (And Other Sensationalist Game Change Gossip) 2010
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He wanted her to do well, and was upset when she wasn't doing well, and was chafing at this whippersnapper Obama, who he doubtless resented both generationally and in the way that many stars resent one another beneath the surface camaraderie of celebrityhood.
William Bradley: The Last Clinton Melodrama? (And Other Sensationalist Game Change Gossip) William Bradley 2010
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You sort of hope for a fourth-wall moment here, where the stage goes dark except for a spotlight on Milano, who then takes a seat on a wooden stool and performs some sort of feminist monologue about semi-celebrityhood.
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He wanted her to do well, and was upset when she wasn't doing well, and was chafing at this whippersnapper Obama, who he doubtless resented both generationally and in the way that many stars resent one another beneath the surface camaraderie of celebrityhood.
William Bradley: The Last Clinton Melodrama? (And Other Sensationalist Game Change Gossip) 2010
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