Snooze vs Unfollow - What's the difference?
snooze | unfollow |
To sleep, especially briefly; to nap.
To pause; to postpone for a short while.
* 2003 , Ken Slovak, Absolute Beginner's Guide to Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 (page 110)
* 2007 , Sue Mosher, Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming (page 359)
* 2011 , Dan Gookin, Bill Loguidice, Motorola ATRIX For Dummies (page 40)
A period of sleep; a nap.
Something boring.
(transitive, intransitive, Internet) To cease to subscribe to (a feed of another user's activity).
* {{quote-news, year=2009, date=April 22, author=Maureen Dowd, title=To Tweet or Not to Tweet, work=New York Times
, passage=With Twitter, it’s as easy to unfollow as it is to follow.}}
As verbs the difference between snooze and unfollow
is that snooze is to sleep, especially briefly; to nap while unfollow is (transitive|intransitive|internet) to cease to subscribe to (a feed of another user's activity).As a noun snooze
is a period of sleep; a nap.snooze
English
Verb
(intransitive)- The boss caught him snoozing at his desk.
- It enables you to dismiss the reminder, dismiss all reminders, open the highlighted item in the Reminder dialog, and snooze the reminder. Snoozing a reminder is similar to hitting the snooze button on an alarm clock
- Let's say you want to see all your reminders, but you don't want it to be too easy to snooze the ones for important items.
- To snooze the phone, press and release the power button.
Noun
(en noun)- The cat enjoys taking a snooze on a sunny windowsill.
- The whole movie was a snooze .
Synonyms
* See alsoSee also
* catnap * nap * shuteye * slumberunfollow
English
Verb
(en verb)citation