blogging

blog

1. noun A webpage that is, or is similar to, an online journal, typically in which entries are posted regularly and in chronological order. The term is short for "weblog." I think it would be fun to start a fashion blog!
2. verb To maintain and post entries to a blog. I've been so busy that I haven't blogged in weeks. When I was going through that rough patch, I found it really helpful to blog about it.
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

blogging

n. making an entry into a weblog or blog = online diary. When John said he was busy blogging, Sally said he should get a life!

blog

verb
See weblog
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See also:
  • blog
  • weblog
  • beater
  • look alike
  • angle
  • angling
  • high
  • high, wide, and handsome
  • wear (one's) apron high
References in periodicals archive
Libel suits are relatively rare--and blogging is so new that little case law exists.
Blogging, ethics and public relations: A proactive and dialogic approach.
A quick note about the video blogs: According to the 2006 Horizon Report, video blogging, or vlogging, was recognized as a technology to watch, particularly when it came to students being able to create their own content for educational use.
With the blogging networks, you can find enough content to keep you occupied for a long time.
Blogging about a certain subject means you can become known as an expert in your field.
Some organizations have created blogging sites that allow for a personalized feel to an online forum (National Corn Growers Association, 2007).
Student enthusiasm tends to increase when teachers integrate blogging into their methods because pupils usually prefer using technology for assignments, and the increase in motivation helps reluctant readers become more involved (Jerles, 2012).
When blogging for differently-abled people, the navigation, or the way in which items are found within the blog, will be significant to the student's successful retrieval of information.
Further, myriad blog posts exist just to help beginners navigate the blogging seas.
The concluding chapter offers the least useful material, as Rettberg merely raises questions about the future of blogging and urges critical thinking about privacy issues in spite of the fact that theoretical tools for this already exist (see Dean 2010; Deibert et al.
The main part of blogging is to create a content which people loves to read.
Exhibit 1 presents a glossary of commonly used blogging terms.
The definition for blogging has changed dramatically in recent years.