followers

plural of follower

Example Sentences

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Recent Examples of followers Our Facebook page has 16 million followers. Aditya Jadhav, Interesting Engineering, 23 June 2026 The mom of two shares videos and photos of her fashion creations and her daughters wearing them with over 29,000 TikTok followers. Zoey Lyttle, PEOPLE, 3 July 2026 Fans track his movements online, where his unofficial X account has more than 800,000 followers. Michelle Del Rey, USA Today, 23 June 2026 Throughout the journey, Pfendler documented life alone at sea for hundreds of thousands of followers on social media, sharing the physical and mental challenges of crossing one of the world's largest oceans. Brittany Miller, FOXNews.com, 5 July 2026 His gift for lyrics that were both deeply humane and sharply critical has endured for generations, inspiring followers such as Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen. Steve Appleford, Rolling Stone, 4 July 2026 In one deployment, comment engagement increased twelvefold while more than 21,000 followers were identified and ranked by purchase likelihood. Gary Drenik, Forbes.com, 2 July 2026 In 1776, the year the Declaration of Independence was signed, Quakers made a formal stance against slavery, prohibiting followers of the faith from engaging in the institution. Tesfaye Negussie, ABC News, 3 July 2026 His growing account of over 659,000 followers recently boomed following a viral video showcasing KC weather to World Cup travelers. Sophie Lindberg, Kansas City Star, 3 July 2026
Recent Examples of Synonyms for followers
Noun
  • Baric worked closely with researchers at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, which many adherents to the lab-leak theory posit as the source of the pandemic; one contingent thinks that Baric might have been the creator of the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
    Daniel Engber, The Atlantic, 7 July 2026
  • Many liberals had been disciplined to adopt methods that purported to strictly confine legal interpretation, only to discover that their most prominent adherents, whether covertly or unconsciously, had other plans.
    Jeannie Suk Gersen, New Yorker, 2 July 2026
Noun
  • But the arrival of Buc-ee's supercharged the trend and spawned imitators like Wally's, which has three 50,000-square-foot locations in the Midwest, with plans for more.
    Kevin Williams, CNBC, 2 July 2026
  • The frontier labs keep shipping the next capability while the imitators are still training on the last one, and the value keeps accruing to whoever is ahead rather than to whoever copied the leader's previous answers.
    Jon Markman, Forbes.com, 26 June 2026
Noun
  • Back in his coaching career, Cruyff was one of the first managers to be obsessed with the cut of the pitch — a trait that has passed over to his disciples, most notably the exacting Pep Guardiola.
    Jacob Whitehead, New York Times, 25 June 2026
  • Christian Science teaches that the divine laws of Truth and Life, as demonstrated by Jesus and his disciples, continue to operate today as an eternal, demonstrable Science.
    Alistair Budd, Christian Science Monitor, 24 June 2026
Noun
  • From shabby apartments to art experiments to filthy needles—with echoes of Patti Smith and Rebecca Makkai—Adler conjures an era of sorrow borne by too many, too young.
    Hamilton Cain, Time, 7 July 2026
  • The rural storytelling and fiddle music on the frontier inspired the emergence and growth of commercial country music and bluegrass music, while echoes of acoustic blues and protest songs can be heard in modern R&B and hip-hop.
    Ted Olson, The Conversation, 2 July 2026

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Cite this Entry

“Followers.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/followers. Accessed 8 Jul. 2026.

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