English edit

Etymology edit

From study +‎ -Tok.

Proper noun edit

StudyTok

  1. The community of academic and studying-oriented accounts on TikTok.
    • 2021 August 13, Koh Ewe, “I ‘Worked With’ Celebrities To See if It Will Make Me More Productive”, in Vice[1], archived from the original on 13 August 2021:
      On StudyTok, people are pretending to study with celebs through fake but impressively realistic video calls.
    • 2022, Brian Boxer Wachler, Influenced: The Impact of Social Media on Our Perception, Rowman & Littlefield, →ISBN, page 54:
      Australian former medical student, newly minted doctor, and influencer Sarah Rav, MD, for example—known as the “Queen of StudyTok”—provides entertaining tips and hacks for students on subjects such as “The Best Way to Take Notes for Online Classes” and “The Best Music for Studying.”
    • 2022 March 15, Talia Kilot, “Do StudyTok hacks really help?”, in The Concordian, volume 39, number 21, page 6:
      Do StudyTok hacks really help?
    • 2022 August, bazaar staff, “Back to School with Muji: Class is in session”, in bazaar, page 94:
      We may have fallen down a StudyTok hole and realized that there are so many amazing ways to use these folders, from study journals to note keeping.

Coordinate terms edit