Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com

megadeal

American  
[meg-uh-deel] / ˈmɛg əˌdil /

noun

  1. a large business transaction.


Etymology

Origin of megadeal

First recorded in 1980–85

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Paramount’s latest offer raises the stakes in the closely watched Hollywood megadeal.

From The Wall Street Journal

Zach Witkoff was onto the next megadeal.

From The Wall Street Journal

It’s a merger—dubbed by many as a megadeal—that his fans celebrated on X, Musk’s social-media company, which he previously merged with xAI and is now, naturally, part of SpaceX.

From The Wall Street Journal

Over the following years and decades, the NFL crafted ever bigger TV contracts, expanding football to Monday night in 1970 and then the first megadeal in 1978 with ABC, CBS and NBC for four years totaling some $646 million annually.

From The Wall Street Journal

The funding round, the third megadeal in the past year, follows a $13 billion investment in September that valued the company at $183 billion.

From The Wall Street Journal