Search for You Gotta Have Friends? Most Only Have 2 on Bing

You gotta have friends? Most only have 2

Many of us may have a long list of Facebook friends, but only two truly close friends we feel we can confide in. That's shrunk from an average of three most had 25 years ago, a study finds.

Sections:  living   
Topics:  facebook   friends   friendship   social   social networking   study   
RELATED ARTICLES
  • LinkedIn Shares Slide After Disappointing Outlook
    LinkedIn's surging share price cooled Friday as the social network projected slower revenue growth next quarter following a decision to lower the number of display ads that the website shows. More
  • Study Finds Expanded Medicaid Increases Health Care Use
    Come January, millions of low-income adults will gain health insurance coverage through Medicaid in one of the farthest-reaching provisions of the Obama health care law. More
  • Mobile Efforts Help Propel Facebook’s Earnings
    Facebook was once a darling of investors, then a turnoff. Now, a year after going public, the social network seems to have settled into a more stable relationship with Wall Street. But the company has still been taking pains to prove that it can make more money from its base of more than a billion users, especially from those using Facebook on mobile devices. More
  • All Eyes On Facebook's Mobile Growth And Graph Search Progress
    Quick Take Facebook will release its Q1 2013 earnings on May 1. We expect healthy advertising revenue growth driven by improved mobile monetization and a growing user base. Margins will shrink due to higher headcount related costs and infrastructure investments. We’ll also look for any color on the success of Graph Search, which could be one of the key features of Facebook going forward. More
  • New study: debt limit deadline likely extended
    The likely deadline for Congress to prevent the government's first default will be later than earlier thought, a Washington think tank has found. The Bipartisan Policy Center said Friday that the government probably won't reach the brink of default until early September or early October. More
BING NEWS:
  • Gotta Catch 'Em All: How Pokémon Go covertly captured your data for years to train a massive AI model
    Gotta Catch 'Em All: How Pokémon Go covertly captured your data for years to train a massive AI model Scientists want to build a device that could capture the body heat we radiate, and use it to ...
    11/20/2024 - 11:00 am | View Link
  • More
BING SEARCH:
  • etymology
    Wikipedia actually has an article dedicated to this phrase. It says: The earliest confirmed publication is the 1866 Dion Boucicault play Flying Scud in which a character knowingly breezes past a difficult situation saying, "Excuse me Mr. Quail, I can't stop; I've got to see a man about a dog."
    11/23/2024 - 11:08 am | View Website
  • expressions
    3. The have to meaning, especially when got is not preceded by have, is typically used in spoken speech in very informal contexts (if it appears in writing, it is normally just a transcription of something spoken). In such spoken contexts, this got to is typically pronounced as gotta, and in writing it is often transcribed as such (see e.g. here).
    11/23/2024 - 9:07 am | View Website
  • Phrase origin: "You ain't got to go home but you got to get out of here."
    Though made popular by the song “Closing Time” by Semisonic in the ’90s the expression appears to have originated a few decades earlier as it was probably just what bartenders used to say to clients who wanted to stay after closing time as the following source suggests:
    11/23/2024 - 8:09 am | View Website
  • Origin of going "number 1" or "number 2" in the bathroom
    Stack Exchange Network. Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers.
    11/22/2024 - 9:18 pm | View Website
  • differences
    5. There is no difference except in formality of context. "I gotta go" is merely a phonetic representation of the relaxed pronunciation of "I've gotta go" and the 'v' sound simply being missed out perhaps due to the speed it was said, accent, colloquialism or just informal/familiar setting. It is similar to the phonetic writing of the word ...
    11/22/2024 - 12:28 pm | View Website
  • More

Comment On This Story

Welcome to Wopular!

Welcome to Wopular

Wopular is an online newspaper rack, giving you a summary view of the top headlines from the top news sites.

Senh Duong (Founder)
Wopular, MWB, RottenTomatoes

Subscribe to Wopular's RSS Fan Wopular on Facebook Follow Wopular on Twitter Follow Wopular on Google Plus

MoviesWithButter : Our Sister Site

More Living News