podcaster

English

Etymology

    From podcast +‎ -er.

    Noun

    podcaster (plural podcasters)

    1. One who podcasts.
      • 2024 February 1, “When Men’s Dating Options Hit The Wall”, in Salt Lake Single Guy[1], archived from the original on 26 December 2024:
        Many a RP podcaster, blogger, and Youtuber have fired up their livesteaming software, to arrogantly beat their chests, boasting that men reach their “peak SMV” (“Sexual Marketplace Value”, or desirability to women) in their late 30s. [] When alpha male podcasters and bloggers boast that “Men’s Peak SMV is Age 37”, I agree.
      • 2025 August 7, Zach Vasquez, “From puppy murder to racist podcasts: South Park’s anti-deportation episode is utterly ruthless TV”, in The Guardian[2], →ISSN:
        The episode follows two different stories: in one, the show’s resident bigot, Eric Cartman, is outraged to learn that fellow fourth grader Clyde has risen to prominence as a white nationalist podcaster who makes offensive claims about women, Jewish people, Black people and other minority groups to goad them into debating him in exploitative viral videos (“WOKE STUDENT TOTALLY PWNED”).

    French

    Etymology

    From podcast +‎ -er, influenced by the English verb to podcast.

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /pɔd.kas.te/
    • Audio (France (Lyon)):(file)
    • Audio (France (Somain)):(file)

    Verb

    podcaster

    1. to podcast

    Conjugation

    Polish

    Alternative forms

    • podkaster

    Etymology

    Unadapted borrowing from English podcaster. By surface analysis, podcast +‎ -er.

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /pɔtˈkas.tɛr/
    • Audio:(file)
    • Rhymes: -astɛr
    • Syllabification: pod‧cas‧ter

    Noun

    podcaster m pers (female equivalent podcasterka)

    1. (Internet) podcaster (person who podcasts)

    Declension

    verbs
    • podcastować impf

    Further reading

    Swedish

    Noun

    podcaster

    1. indefinite plural of podcast