Created by: Robert Derbyshire
Número de Blosarios: 4
- English (EN)
- Malay (MS)
- Greek (EL)
- Russian (RU)
- Swahili (SW)
- Romanian (RO)
- French (FR)
- Vietnamese (VI)
- Albanian (SQ)
- Japanese (JA)
- Arabic (AR)
- French, Canadian (CF)
- Bulgarian (BG)
- Serbian (SR)
- Chinese, Simplified (ZS)
- Spanish (ES)
- Italian (IT)
- Farsi (FA)
- Spanish, Latin American (XL)
- Hungarian (HU)
- Indonesian (ID)
- Swedish (SV)
- German (DE)
- Dutch (NL)
- Afrikaans (AF)
- English, UK (UE)
- Kazakh (KK)
- Sinhalese (SI)
- Malay (MS)
- Greek (EL)
- Russian (RU)
- Swahili (SW)
- Romanian (RO)
- French (FR)
- Vietnamese (VI)
- Albanian (SQ)
- Japanese (JA)
- Arabic (AR)
- French, Canadian (CF)
- Bulgarian (BG)
- Serbian (SR)
- Chinese, Simplified (ZS)
- Spanish (ES)
- Italian (IT)
- Farsi (FA)
- Spanish, Latin American (XL)
- Hungarian (HU)
- Indonesian (ID)
- Swedish (SV)
- German (DE)
- Dutch (NL)
- Afrikaans (AF)
- English, UK (UE)
- Kazakh (KK)
- Sinhalese (SI)
A turing test to protect comment sections from automated spam. A trademark of Carnegie Mellon University, it actually stands for 'completely automated public turing test to tell computers and humans ...
Off-topic commercial remarks, made in a blog's comment section, and generally containing links. The comments may seem innocuous, but contain links to dubious sites from the personal details.
The community of commenters on a particular blog.
Visible html or other coding on a page, owing to incorrect coding.
A biz blog established to communicate the company's viewpoint on a public relations crisis.
A blog reader who posts comments in the comments section.
Acronym used in online correspondence, where any words communicated should not be posted on the other person's blog.