Baidu
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /baɪˈduː/
Proper noun
Baidu
- A Chinese multinational technology company specializing in Internet-related services and products.
- 2006 September 17, David Barboza, “The Rise of Baidu (That’s Chinese for Google)”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:
- While Baidu continues to gain market share in China — and does so with a Web site that the Chinese government heavily censors and that gives priority to advertising rather than relevant search results — some analysts question whether Baidu can withstand competition from Google and Yahoo, which possess superior technology and global work forces.
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- (Internet) A search engine that popularized the company of the same name.
- 2014, Edward C. Baig; Bob LeVitus, iPad mini For Dummies, John Wiley & Sons, →ISBN, page 80:
- Most of us spend a lot of time using search engines. And the ones we summon most often are Google, Yahoo!, and Microsoft Bing, at least in the United States. If you're in China, chances are you search using Baidu.
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Translations
Verb
Baidu (third-person singular simple present Baidus, present participle Baiduing, simple past and past participle Baidued)
- (uncommon, transitive) To search for (something) on the Internet using the Baidu search engine.
- 2012, Chen Yan & Jiang Yuhong, “Integration of ICTs into subject teaching in pre-service English teacher education”, in 2012 International Conference on Information Technology Based Higher Education and Training (ITHET), IEEE, , →ISBN:
- This generally involves students reading the text for the main idea of the text, consulting print dictionary or online dictionary or Googling /Baiduing (one of the most popular searching engine in China) for difficult words, phrases, expression and sentence structure and figure out how they should be used properly if they can’t find satisfying answers from their print dictionaries.
- 2014 July 11, fjrp2, “Car destroyed by ukrainian artillery.”, in alt.politics.international (Usenet):
- P.S, did some baiduing, found your cool dictator book
- 2019, Wenjing Liu, The Implications of Science and Technology for Chinese Women (dissertation), Michigan Technological University, , pages 108–109:
- When I baidued the keywords “剩女/leftover women” and “新华网/Xinhua.net,” a website sponsored by the Chinese government on June 11, 2019, at 11:30a.m., I found numerous reports on the leftover women on the Xinhua net.
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