hot seat
See also: hotseat
English
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Noun
- (slang) The electric chair.
- 1932, Ward Morehouse, Lillie Hayward, Big City Blues:
- Looks like you for the hot seat, kid. Come along, both of you.
- 1955, Rex Stout, “The Next Witness”, in Three Witnesses, Bantam, published 1994, →ISBN, page 10:
- With deep creases slanting across the jowls of his dark bony face from the corners of his wide full mouth, and his sunken dark eyes, he was certainly a prime subject for the artists who sketch candidates for the hot seat for the tabloids, and for three days they had been making the most of it.
- The seat occupied by a game show contestant at a stage where they are answering questions alone.
- (by extension) Any stressful situation.
- 1966 October 8, Kit Pedler, “The Tenth Planet, episode 1” (19:29 from the start), in Doctor Who, season 4, episode 5, spoken by General Cutler (Robert Beatty), via BBC:
- Now just a minute. You turn up out of nowhere, a routine space shot goes wrong, a new planet appears and you tell us you know all about it. That puts you slap bang in the hot seat, right?
- (video games, attributive) A multiplayer game mode where the players take turns playing the game.
- 2008 September 14, Jonathan Miller, “Civilization IV: Colonization Multiplayer Hands-On”, in GameSpot:
- In addition to traditional LAN play and online modes, there's […] a hot seat mode in which multiple players take their turns on the same computer […] .
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