bigtime
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]bigtime (comparative more bigtime, superlative most bigtime)
- Of major significance or importance.
- 1918, Edna Ferber, “That’s Marriage”, in Cheerful—By Request[1], Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Page & Co., page 169:
- Wait till you see your name in two-foot electrics over the front of every big-time house in the country.
- 1954 May, Richard Wilson, “Back to Julie”, in Galaxy Science Fiction, volume 8, number 2, page 69:
- Krasnow is a big-time operator; I’ve always been, you might say, in the peanut end of the game.
- 1959, Marc Brody, Low Dive for Lola, page i. 9:
- 'On the level, honey, I have an all-time, big-time need for coffee.'
- 1997 July, Jennifer Zajac, “Get some major league fun at Little League dollars”, in Money, volume 26, number 7, page 158:
- Tired of shelling out bigtime bucks to see overpaid major leaguers with underwhelming stats and attitudes to match, baseball fans by the thousands are rediscovering a more relaxed—and cheaper—version of the national pastime: the minor leagues.
- 2006 April 23, “A twist in the tale”, in The Observer:
- With a previous conviction in 1954 for receiving tins of corned beef, Betchley was hardly bigtime.
Antonyms
[edit]Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]of major significance
Adverb
[edit]bigtime (not comparable)
- To a significant degree.
- 2018 March 15, Bill Press, “‘Lamb the Sham’ beats ‘Trump the Chump’”, in Chicago Tribune:
- This was the first test for that message -- and it failed bigtime.
Translations
[edit]to a significant degree
Noun
[edit]bigtime (plural bigtimes)
- Alternative form of big time
- 1986 May 30, Larry Stewart, “It’s Time to Replace the Talking Heads With Racing Cars”, in Los Angeles Times:
- The Financial News Network’s SCORE program […] hit the bigtime last Monday by offering live coverage of Snow Chief’s victory in the Jersey Derby […]
- 2010 May 20, Roy Wilkinson, “How Judas Priest invented heavy metal”, in The Guardian:
- Thirty years ago Rob Halford led Judas Priest, and heavy metal itself, out of the Midlands and into the bigtime.