English

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Etymology

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From dystopia +‎ -an.

Pronunciation

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Adjective

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dystopian (comparative more dystopian, superlative most dystopian)

  1. Of or pertaining to a dystopia.
    • 2012 March 22, Scott Tobias, “The Hunger Games”, in AV Club[1]:
      If Suzanne Collins’ novel The Hunger Games turns up on middle-school curricula 50 years from now—and as accessible dystopian science fiction with allusions to early-21st-century strife, that isn’t out of the question—the lazy students of the future can be assured that they can watch the movie version and still get better than a passing grade.
    • 2019 June 30, Philip Oltermann, quoting Tom Hillenbrand, “German sci-fi fans lap up dystopian tales of Brexit Britain”, in The Guardian[2]:
      In my book Britain has actually worked out how it wants to leave and the EU is preparing a new constitution as a result. The real Brexit is actually much more dystopian.
    • 2020 January 17, Amy Chozick, “This Is the Guy Who’s Taking Away the Likes”, in New York Times[3]:
      He kept thinking about an episode of “Black Mirror,” the British dystopian anthology series, in which the characters rate everyone they interact with on a scale of 1 to 5 stars. (It doesn’t end well.)
    • 2023 June 7, Samira Asma-Sadeque, “‘It’s too much’: New Yorkers don masks or stay inside amid smog crisis”, in The Guardian[4], →ISSN:
      The whole city is immersed in a dystopian-looking smog: urban streets in sepia, emptier than usual, bathed in an eerie quiet.
  2. Dire; characterized by human suffering or misery.

Derived terms

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Translations

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Finnish

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Noun

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dystopian

  1. genitive singular of dystopia