English edit

 
A Sony PlayStation console.

Etymology edit

play +‎ station, coined by Japanese-American multinational software company Sony Interactive Entertainment

Noun edit

PlayStation (plural PlayStations)

  1. (video games, trademark) A video game console of the "PlayStation" brand.
    I bought a PlayStation for my son.
    • 2003, Cash Peters, Gullible's Travels: The Adventures of a Bad Taste Tourist, page 55:
      Back then, kids didn't have TV or video games, so I guess slaughtering your mom and dad was a bit like the Playstation[sic] of its day.
    • 2009, Michael Schaffer, One Nation Under Dog, page 150:
      The Everlasting Treat Ball landed like the PlayStation of the pet products world back in 2004.
    • 2009, Paul Clammer, Alison Bing, Anthony Sattin, Paul Stiles, Lonely Planet Morocco, page 38:
      He was obsessed with bullfighting, which was the PlayStation of the day, only considerably more dangerous; he was soon gored to death.
  2. (video games, trademark) The original PlayStation.

Synonyms edit

Derived terms edit

Translations edit

Verb edit

PlayStation (third-person singular simple present PlayStations, present participle PlayStationing, simple past and past participle PlayStationed)

  1. (rare) To play on the PlayStation video game console.
    • 1999, Coexistence: Twenty-Five Years, [London?]: Blueprint, →ISBN, page 119:
      Mark Bond, designer “25 years ago I was bouncing around on my Space-hopper, watching Thunderbirds and playing Kerplunk. 25 years later, I have just bought a Sacco bean-bag from Coexistence to sit on whilst Playstationing.[sic] []
    • 2000 May 15, Cox News Service, “PlayStation games can run on PC”, in Dayton Daily News, volume 123, number 232, Dayton, Oh.: Cox Ohio Publishing, →ISSN, page 2E:
      Connectix does not claim to emulate all Sony games and even the ones it does accommodate won’t necessarily run smoothly or accurately, but with a fair-sized library of perfectly compatible games, CVGS does “broaden consumer choice,” as it purports to intend, and allows for PlayStationing at work, during a long commute via one’s laptop, or at home when the TV isn’t available.
    • 2001, Tim Moore, Continental Drifter: Taking the Low Road with the First Grand Tourist, London: Abacus, →ISBN, page 296:
      A boat was moored up at one: the fairy-lit waterline cabins looked impossibly cosy, the pigtailed daughter PlayStationing on the bridge painfully evocative.
    • 2001 May, Chris Stead, “Mat Hoffman”, in Official NZ PlayStation Magazine, number 44, Auckland: ACP Publishing, →OCLC, page 82:
      Do you fit much PlayStationing into your hectic schedule?
    • 2005, Nicemongoose, quotee, edited by Tim Worstall, 2005: Blogged; Dispatches from the Blogosphere, London: Friday Books, →ISBN, page 52:
      He’ll play outside in the fresh air when he should be inside playstationing and getting asthma.
    • 2005 June/July, Vivian Host, “broken RULES”, in XLR8R, number 88, San Francisco, Calif.: Amalgam Media, Inc., →ISSN, page 50, column 1:
      “I moved in to ‘guard’ the place from vagabonds and dossers,” says [Orin] Walters, laughing. “And I turned it into a living, eating, Playstationing,[sic] music-making, smoking den for me and my mates. And that’s what we did, 24-7.”
    • 2008 February 14, Wesley Morris, “Dancing aside, ‘Step Up 2’ just plods”, in The Boston Globe, volume 273, number 45, Boston, Mass., →ISSN, page D9, column 3:
      While she falls asleep studying, the rest of gang is partying and PlayStationing; []
    • 2009, Michael Yates, edited by John Clarke, Life Class, [Wakefield]: Nettle Books, →ISBN, page 57:
      And faceless Jason, Playstationing[sic] for 30 hours or more, ratcheted down from Druggie High, to twitch upon the floor.
    • 2010 May 19, Joanna Molloy, “Ring Around the Rosie days in city are long gone”, in Daily News, New York, N.Y., →ISSN, page 3, column 1:
      [Lenore] Skenazy wrote on her May 22 dotcom FreeRangeKids, it would be “a day to get kids outside to meet each other and relearn the lost art of playing! As opposed to PlayStationing.”
    • 2015, J. T. Dock Houk, Life’s a Joke, Pittsburgh, Pa.: Dorrance Publishing Co, →ISBN, page 348:
      Dad comes in—Skyler is playstationing. Dad says: “What about your homework?” Skyler says: “Later. All work and no Playstation[sic] makes Jack a dull boy.”
    • 2016, Amanda Prowse, Another Love, London: Head of Zeus, →ISBN, page 100:
      They laughed, thinking of their friend who had swapped his evening run for pizza eating and PlayStationing and had ballooned.

Translations edit

Further reading edit

Portuguese edit

 
Portuguese Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia pt

Etymology edit

Unadapted borrowing from English PlayStation.

Pronunciation edit

 
  • (Brazil) IPA(key): /plejsˈte(j).ʃõ/ [pleɪ̯sˈte(ɪ̯).ʃõ], (usually proscribed) /plejsˈte(j).ʃu/ [pleɪ̯sˈte(ɪ̯).ʃu]
    • (Rio de Janeiro) IPA(key): /plejʃˈte(j).ʃõ/ [pleɪ̯ʃˈte(ɪ̯).ʃõ], (usually proscribed) /plejʃˈte(j).ʃu/ [pleɪ̯ʃˈte(ɪ̯).ʃu]
    • (Southern Brazil) IPA(key): /plejsˈte(j).ʃõ/ [pleɪ̯sˈte(ɪ̯).ʃõ], (usually proscribed) /plejsˈte(j).ʃo/ [pleɪ̯sˈte(ɪ̯).ʃo]

Noun edit

PlayStation m or f (plural PlayStations)

  1. (video games) PlayStation (a video game console of the "PlayStation" brand)
    Synonyms: Play, PS
  2. (video games) PlayStation (the original PlayStation)
    Synonyms: PlayStation 1, Play 1, PS1

Noun edit

PlayStation f (uncountable)

  1. (trademark) PlayStation (video gaming brand)