Citations:coronapocalypse

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English citations of coronapocalypse and Coronapocalypse

Noun: "the 2019 coronavirus pandemic and its resulting social, economic, and political turmoil"

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2020
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 2020 March 2, John Birmingham, “When the coronapocalypse is over, I’m never washing my hands again”, in The Sydney Morning Herald[1]:
    If and when I survive the coronapocalypse I’m going to finally peel myself out of my home made biohazard suit [] and take a whole month off to just lie around the house touching and stroking my face.
  • 2020 March 19, Katherine Yao, “My Final Freshman Feelings In the Wake of Coronavirus”, in The Cornell Daily Sun, volume 136, number 70, →ISSN, page 9:
    When people warned me that my freshman year in college would be the most difficult, I was expecting many long, hot dates with Calculus: Early Transcendentals in the Olin Stacks. Never did I imagine that there would be a coronapocalypse.
  • 2020 March 19, Alesia Bani, “Thanks to COVID-19, a study abroad term becomes study at home”, in The Japan Times[2]:
    The twist I didn’t expect was that my home country of the United States would fall deeper into a “coronapocalypse” than Japan. Instead of receiving concerned messages from friends and family about my situation here, it’s now me who is checking in on them.
  • 2020 March 20, Alanna Durkin Richer, “Quarantinis anyone? Happy hours go virtual amid virus crisis”, in Associated Press International:
    Now she is planning to host weekly video chat happy hours to help moms "celebrate surviving another week of the Coronapocalypse" with a "quarantini."
  • 2020 April 2, Bruce Edward Walker, “Column: You’re never alone with a schizophrenic”, in Morning Sun[3]:
    But I digress. Intentionally, I suppose, as a deadline looms and there seems nothing else in the world to write about other than the coronapocalypse.
  • 2020 April 6, Christopher Null, “The Reality of Covid-19 Is Hitting Teens Especially Hard”, in Wired[4]:
    The coronapocalypse has been devastating for us adults, but its impact on teenagers is arguably far greater.
  • 2020 April 13, Joel Rubinoff, “‘You can still connect on an emotional level through music’”, in Waterloo Region Record[5]:
    As the Coronapocalypse enters week four, with entire cities and countries shut down, the usual suspects are dusting off their resumes faster than you can say "9/11" to assume the mantle of "Voice of a Generation."
  • 2020 April 16, Mark Leiren-Young, “Comment: Write tributes to people you love, think of stories that make you smile”, in The Times-Colonist[6]:
    I stayed up all night, tuned out the Coronapocalypse and wrote about my friend — trying to find the laughs she’d asked for.
  • 2020 April 17, Soleil Ho, “‘Two new cookbooks on beans perfect for coronavirus shelter-in-place cooking”, in San Francisco Chronicle[7]:
    Zoom meetings, handkerchief masks, toilet paper and beans might as well be the four horsemen of the coronapocalypse.
  • 2020 April 21, Julia Kanapathippillaii, “Coronavirus: Surviving the Coronapocalypse”, in The Canberra Times[8]:
    Canberra Psychologist and founder of 'My Colourful Mind' Brianna Thomas has created a blog series Surviving the Coronapocalpse.
  • 2021 October 30, Buddy Shipley, “Vote No on 1A again”, in Vail Daily, Vail, Colorado:
    This past year and a half of the Coronapocalypse has been financially devastating for many, but that doesn't stop the tax and spend gangs!
  • 2022 February 3, Bruce Walker, “The false choice between music and politics”, in The Morning Sun, Alma, Michigan:
    But all this nonsense has laid bare the simple fact most of us have lost our respective minds over politics, what passes for science, culture wars and the coronapocalypse.