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syndication

/sin-di-key-shuhn/US // ˌsɪn dɪˈkeɪ ʃən //

辛迪加,银团,合并,合并计算

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the state or fact of being published simultaneously, or supplied for simultaneous publication, in a number of newspapers or other periodicals:This July, her edgy, cult-favorite comic strip is set to launch in newspapers nationwide under syndication by United Media.
    • : content that is aired, or supplied for airing, on a number of media outlets in different places:Our goal is to have a radio station that is live and local during the day, with little or no syndication.
    • : Television. the state or fact of having been sold directly to independent stations for airing:Star Trek famously had low ratings when it was originally broadcast, but it became a cult classic in syndication during the 1970s, and has had a major influence on popular culture.
    • : Finance. the act or process of sharing the financial risk of a business venture, loan, or the like, as by pooling resources or capital:If your project requires a large sum of money, loan syndication is a good alternative.
    • : Finance. the combining of individuals or organizations into a group in order to undertake some specific duty or carry out specific transactions or negotiations: For individual investors, syndication can be a way to build a more diversified portfolio, spread risk and improve their returns.
    • : Computers. a process by which access to content or updates can be shared between websites or between a website and the end user, often by means of a feed:The information given is in the public domain, but we encourage organizations to mirror our web text through content syndication rather than copying our text onto their websites.A podcast is a digital media series in which episodes are released periodically and made available through web syndication.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • This helps you be more focused and efficient with your budget and resources in channels like content syndication.

  • Pull a list of your target accounts, figure out which of them are showing intent and then generate leads only at those target accounts, with content syndication.

  • First, senior reporter Kayleigh Barber interviews BuzzFeed CEO Jonah Peretti, who will be leading both companies as they remain separate but share resources on fronts including advertising and content syndication.

  • The first offering is a restaurant menu-content syndication program called Menu Connect.

  • It also calls for line-of-business restrictions, or limiting the markets in which a dominant firm can engage, similar to bans on television networks’ entering production and syndication markets.

  • Reaction was and has continued to be positive throughout re-airings and worldwide syndication.

  • The words that now appear, via syndication, in the Los Angeles Times, the New York Daily News, and 223 other papers.

  • The show will launch in broadcast syndication and on Comedy Central this September.

  • And she must do it in the brutally competitive syndication market.

  • After September 11, the episode was taken out of syndication in most markets.

  • I cannot but think that the principle of syndication is more suited to business than to generosity.

  • It remained obstinately a specimen—of the other side of the great syndication.

  • "National industrial syndication," say the business organisers.