godslot: meaning, definition, pronunciation and examples

rare
UK/ˈɡɒdslɒt/US/ˈɡɑdslɑt/

technical/media jargon, formal

My Flashcards

Quick answer

What does “godslot” mean?

A fixed time slot in a broadcasting schedule, typically on a Sunday morning, reserved for religious programming.

Audio

Pronunciation

Definition

Meaning and Definition

A fixed time slot in a broadcasting schedule, typically on a Sunday morning, reserved for religious programming.

A regular, often mandatory, segment of broadcast media dedicated to religious content, reflecting public service obligations or cultural traditions in scheduling.

Dialectal Variation

British vs American Usage

Differences

Predominantly a British term due to the historical role of public service broadcasting (e.g., BBC) in providing religious content. In American English, equivalent programming is not typically referred to by a specific term and is more commercially driven.

Connotations

In British English, it may imply a formal, possibly obligatory, part of the schedule. In American English, the concept is less institutionalized, and religious programming is often part of niche or commercial channels.

Frequency

Extremely rare in American English; low frequency and specialized in British English, primarily in media and academic discussions.

Grammar

How to Use “godslot” in a Sentence

the + godslot + on + [day/time]a + godslot + for + [purpose]in + the + godslot

Vocabulary

Collocations

strong
Sunday godslotreligious godslotbroadcasting godslot
medium
television godslotradio godslotmorning godslot
weak
weekly godslottraditional godslotpublic service godslot

Usage

Meaning in Context

Business

The channel's regulatory commitment requires maintaining the Sunday godslot, impacting overall scheduling strategies.

Academic

Media scholars debate the relevance of the godslot in contemporary pluralistic societies.

Everyday

Rarely used in casual conversation; might be referenced when discussing TV schedules on Sunday mornings.

Technical

The godslot is mandated under the broadcaster's public service charter, typically featuring worship services or ethical discussions.

Vocabulary

Synonyms of “godslot”

Strong

Neutral

religious slotfaith broadcastdevotional segment

Weak

religious programming timespiritual segmentchurch slot

Vocabulary

Antonyms of “godslot”

prime timesecular programmingcommercial break

Watch out

Common Mistakes When Using “godslot”

  • Misspelling as two words ('god slot') or hyphenated ('god-slot') in formal contexts.
  • Using the term to refer to any important time slot (e.g., 'the godslot for the big match') dilutes its specific meaning.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

It is typically written as one word ('godslot') in technical and formal contexts, though hyphenated or two-word forms are sometimes seen informally.

Yes, the term applies to any broadcast medium (TV, radio) that allocates a regular time slot for religious content.

Traditionally and most commonly on Sunday mornings, but it can refer to any fixed, recurring time dedicated to religious programming.

Not directly; it is a culturally specific term tied to the history of public service broadcasting in the UK and similar systems.

A fixed time slot in a broadcasting schedule, typically on a Sunday morning, reserved for religious programming.

Godslot is usually technical/media jargon, formal in register.

Godslot: in British English it is pronounced /ˈɡɒdslɒt/, and in American English it is pronounced /ˈɡɑdslɑt/. Tap the audio buttons above to hear it.

Learning

Memory Aids

Mnemonic

Imagine a TV schedule with a slot (a specific time) reserved only for programs about God -> godslot.

Conceptual Metaphor

TIME IS A CONTAINER FOR IDEOLOGY (religion occupies a fixed segment of the temporal container).

Practice

Quiz

Fill in the gap
The BBC's on Sunday morning often features hymns and sermons.
Multiple Choice

What is a 'godslot' primarily associated with?

Practise

Train, don’t just look up

Five interactive tools to remember words, train your ear, and build vocabulary in real context — drawn from this dictionary.

See all tools