Bubble in a sentence as a noun

I've called the kneejerk "bubble" reactions "boring" [1] and I stand by that.

I knew a guy who made a boatload of money off of the dotcom bubble.

To this, I say to him, "get out of your bubble and get a broader perspective."4.

Death is sad, but it's good that there are people who had decided to stay out of this bubble.

Don't confuse a highly active, easy to penetrate market with a bubble.

Yet LinkedIn is the very definition of a bubble.

Back in the original dot-com bubble, I worked at a place that had the most amazing coffee machine I've ever seen.

Bubble in a sentence as a verb

This mindset all changed during the bubble era, when convertible notes came in to help solve the early-stage funding problem.

What's particularly interesting is that some of the recent disclosures don't seem to be visible inside the bubble.

After a while, as the go-go years of the 1980s and 1990s culminated eventually in the tech bubble of 2000, a funny pattern emerged by which a big-firm billing was almost in the nature of an "opening offer.

Only in the hyperventilating startup bubble world can tracking people around a shopping mall with wifi be cooler than tracking your position anywhere on earth with satellites that were put there by huge rockets.

Given all of the above, and given that IPOs remain at far below the old bubble levels in frequency, it can be risky to lay out any excessive cash to exercise at any time before a liquidity event.

I see groups of people socialising and talking - if someone is by themselves then their phone can provide some distraction/semblance of "company".There's also a tendency for us techy types to get caught in our own little bubble - I get my news from HN Reddit and Twitter, so my view on how people use these services is clouded.

Bubble definitions

noun

a hollow globule of gas (e.g., air or carbon dioxide)

noun

a speculative scheme that depends on unstable factors that the planner cannot control; "his proposal was nothing but a house of cards"; "a real estate bubble"

noun

an impracticable and illusory idea; "he didn't want to burst the newcomer's bubble"

noun

a dome-shaped covering made of transparent glass or plastic

verb

form, produce, or emit bubbles; "The soup was bubbling"

verb

flow in an irregular current with a bubbling noise; "babbling brooks"

See also: ripple babble guggle burble gurgle

verb

rise in bubbles or as if in bubbles; "bubble to the surface"

verb

cause to form bubbles; "bubble gas through a liquid"

verb

expel gas from the stomach; "In China it is polite to burp at the table"

See also: burp belch eruct