Hunger Games
English
Alternative forms
- hunger game
- Hunger Game
- hunger games
Etymology
From the titular fictional gladiatorial contests in The Hunger Games, first published in 2008.
Noun
Hunger Games (plural Hunger Games)
- (neologism) A vicious contest, especially one that is winner-take-all.
- 2012 December 28, “Jockey James Winks falls prey to the Hunger Games of riding”, in news.com.au, archived from the original on 28 December 2012:
- 2014 September 10, Graeme Virtue, “Who’s Doing the Dishes? is the best daytime TV in years”, in The Guardian:
- If the term “daytime TV” used to be synonymous with slightly ramshackle, undemanding programming attuned to the languid circadian rhythms of hungover students and the retired, it’s now a hyper-competitive arena of mechanical oneupmanship, a Hunger Games for image and sound editors.
- 2015 November 9, Nicholas Da Silva, “Registration Week: May the Odds Be Ever in Your Favor”, in The Montclarion, archived from the original on 4 March 2016:
- “[Registration week] always been The Hunger Games of scheduling,” Valdez said. “You ultimately get in based on timing and luck.”
Anagrams
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