catfish
English
Noun
catfish (countable and uncountable, plural catfish or catfishes)
- Any fish of the order Siluriformes, mainly found in fresh water, lacking scales, and having barbels like whiskers around the mouth.
Derived terms
Translations
type of fish
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Verb
catfish (third-person singular simple present catfishes, present participle catfishing, simple past and past participle catfished)
Etymology 2
From the 2010 documentary Catfish, supposedly inspired by the practice of fishermen keeping catfish (see sense 1) active by storing them with cod which nip at their tails.
Noun
catfish (plural catfishes)
- (Internet) Someone who creates a fake profile on a social media platform in order to deceive people.
- (Internet) Such a fake profile.
Verb
catfish (third-person singular simple present catfishes, present participle catfishing, simple past and past participle catfished)
- (Internet, slang, transitive) To create and operate a fake online profile to deceive (someone).
- 2013 January 17, Mary Pilon, “In Te’o Story, Deception Ripped From the Screen”, in The New York Times, ISSN 0362-4331:
- Getting catfished is when someone falls for a person online who is not necessarily real. It can involve pictures, phone calls, social media profiles, text messages, e-mails and even phony friends or family members.
- 2014 January 16, Donald Glover as Troy, Cooperative Polygraphy ('Community'), season 5, episode 4, NBC, 12:17 from the start:
- [to Abed] You made a profile for a fake dude and lured her into an online relationship. [to Annie] He's catfishing you.
- For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:catfish.
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Translations
operate fake profile
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See also
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