quadball

English

Etymology

A game of quadball.

From quad- (four) + ball or quad + ball. The sport sense was introduced in 2022 by the International Quadball Association, formerly the International Quidditch Association, with quad- chosen in reference to the number of balls and positions in the game.[1] The IQA cited concerns over the trademarked status of Quidditch and a wish to distance itself from the "anti-trans positions" of J. K. Rowling.[1]

Noun

quadball (countable and uncountable, plural quadballs)

  1. (computer graphics, countable) A rounded cube used to approximate a sphere.
  2. (This is a hot sense, kept provisionally) (sports, uncountable, neologism) A co-ed contact ball sport created as a ground-based adaptation of Quidditch, featuring the same positions, balls, and goals as the fictional sport, but with the players clutching broomsticks and a human "snitch runner" carrying the snitch (an autonomous magical device in the Harry Potter novels).
    Synonym: Muggle quidditch

References

  1. Alex Traub, "Quidditch Becomes ‘Quadball,’ Leaving J.K. Rowling Behind", The New York Times, 20 July 2022

Further reading

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