ChatGPT

English

Etymology

From chat +‎ GPT (generative pre-trained transformer). First attested in 2022.

Pronunciation

  • Audio (US):(file)

Proper noun

ChatGPT

  1. A popular chatbot based on a large language model.
    Synonym: (Australia, slang) Chatty G
    • 2025 March 25, Rachel Hall, “Heavy ChatGPT users tend to be more lonely, suggests research”, in The Guardian[1], →ISSN:
      Heavy users of ChatGPT tend to be lonelier, more emotionally dependent on the AI tool and have fewer offline social relationships, new research suggests.
    • 2025 March 27, Madison Malone Kircher, “People Love Studio Ghibli. But Should They Be Able to Recreate It?”, in The New York Times[2], New York, N.Y.: The New York Times Company, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 29 March 2025:
      By Thursday, Ms. Berganza said ChatGPT appeared to have tightened restrictions on what images users were allowed to Ghiblify.

Noun

ChatGPT (plural ChatGPTs)

  1. (by extension) Any chatbot or AI software.

Verb

ChatGPT (third-person singular simple present ChatGPTs, present participle ChatGPTing or ChatGPT-ing, simple past and past participle ChatGPTed or ChatGPT'ed or ChatGPT'd)

  1. (ambitransitive, Internet slang) To use ChatGPT; to create or generate (something) with the help of ChatGPT. [from late 2022]
    I ChatGPTed a bedtime story for my son.
    • 2023 February 5, Kathryn Parsons, “Boom times are back in San Francisco’s tech mecca”, in The Sunday Times[3]:
      Coffee shops-cum-meeting-spots dotted across the city are teeming (Equator, Blue Bottle and Saint Frank). Caffeine-fuelled, lactose-intolerant, macadamia milk latte-drinking young folk are journalling, manifesting, coding, ChatGPT-ing and pitching their ideas.

Italian

Noun

ChatGPT m (invariable)

  1. ChatGPT

Japanese

Pronunciation

  • (Tokyo) チャットジーピーティ [chàttójíípíítíꜜì] (Nakadaka – [8])
  • IPA(key): [t͡ɕa̠t̚to̞ʑiːpʲiːtʲiː]

Proper noun

ChatGPT(チャットジーピーティー) • (Chattojīpītī

  1. ChatGPT