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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’s 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.
Word History and Origins
Origin of co-host1
Example Sentences
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 “First Take” in August 2023, two months after his seven-year run as a co-host on FS1’s “Undisputed” with Skip Bayless came to an end.
Nora Princiotti, co-host of the We're Obsessed podcast, then waded in.
Dana Perino, co-host of the popular Fox News panel show “The Five,” has never taken her success for granted.
The “CBS Mornings” co-host has been telling anyone who will listen that what she and her five fellow NS-31 mission crewmembers experienced was not a “ride.”
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