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co-host
[ verb koh-hohst, koh-hohst; noun koh-hohst ]
verb (used with or without object)
- to host (a program) jointly with at least one other person:
It鈥檚 a daily talk show co-hosted by three women.
They were a beloved comedy duo who cohosted on radio for 14 years before taking their variety hour to television.
noun
- a person who hosts a program jointly with at least one other person:
Everyone was surprised when his co-host left the show at the peak of its popularity.
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of co-host1
Example Sentences
Gregg Wallace stepped aside as Masterchef co-host after allegations including inappropriate sexual comments by 13 people who worked with him, which he has said are "not all true".
"Boca fans die for every game, but we live for Copa Libertadores nights and Superclasicos. It's a game unlike any other," says Rodrigo Azurmendi, Boca fan and co-host of the Boca in English Podcast.
Southampton's draw with West Ham means they have equalled the points tally of Robbie Savage's useless Derby County side in 2007-08, but I still feel my 606 co-host has to go down as the Premier League's worst-ever captain.
Sharpe, 56, first appeared on 鈥淔irst Take鈥 in August 2023, two months after his seven-year run as a co-host on FS1鈥檚 鈥淯ndisputed鈥 with Skip Bayless came to an end.
Nora Princiotti, co-host of the We're Obsessed podcast, then waded in.
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