dystopian

English

Etymology

From dystopia +‎ -an.

Pronunciation

Adjective

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.
    • 2023 December 22, Steven Levy, “How Not to Be Stupid About AI, With Yann LeCun”, in Wired[5], →ISSN:
      A pioneer of modern AI and Meta’s chief AI scientist, LeCun is one of the technology’s most vocal defenders. He scoffs at his peers’ dystopian scenarios of supercharged misinformation and even, eventually, human extinction.
  2. Dire; characterized by human suffering or misery.
    Coordinate term: nightmarish

Derived terms

Translations

See also

Finnish

Noun

dystopian

  1. genitive singular of dystopia