How to Use megacorporation in a Sentence

megacorporation

noun
  • There are fortunes to be made and new megacorporations to be built.
    IEEE Spectrum, 15 July 2021
  • Until those megacorporations stop sticking us with so much waste, there’s nothing the city can do.
    Justin Sanchez, New York Daily News, 15 May 2026
  • Well, maybe Neosporin is owned by a giant, evil megacorporation.
    Maria Bamford, Vulture, 24 Mar. 2026
  • The megacorporation has been hit with a slew of lawsuits recently.
    Whizy Kim, refinery29.com, 1 Sep. 2020
  • The setting has moved forward as well with new threats on the rise and new megacorporations hiring shadowrunners to put them down.
    Rob Wieland, Forbes.com, 15 May 2025
  • Mozilla's track record with Firefox is no worse than megacorporations like Google.
    Ryan Whitwam, Ars Technica, 5 Mar. 2025
  • Jack Quaid's resistance to megacorporations doesn't end on screen.
    Wesley Stenzel, EW.com, 17 July 2023
  • My father called the network and railed into the void of a megacorporation answering machine.
    Cynthia Greenlee, Harper's BAZAAR, 17 Sep. 2021
  • But a vision of the future ideated by a creative agency for a megacorporation was always going to be dreadful.
    Dean Kissick, New York Times, 1 Dec. 2021
  • Players take on the role of Arjun Devraj, an enforcer for the megacorporation called Soltari.
    Gieson Cacho, Mercury News, 30 Apr. 2026
  • The other mission was much more involved, tasking us with crossing the city to talk to a mysterious agent—who turned out to be part of Militech, a megacorporation.
    Hayden Dingman, PCWorld, 13 June 2018
  • Still, despite a blind sprint by just about every network and megacorporation to OTT supremacy, there are shows that resist our instinct to hyper-consume.
    Jason Parham, WIRED, 6 Aug. 2019
  • All are narrated by Murderbot, who is technically owned by a megacorporation but manages to hack and override its governor module.
    ArsTechnica, 19 May 2025
  • They’re employed by ReGen, a megacorporation that sees restoring the planet not as a moral imperative, but as a juicy opportunity for a tax break.
    Geoffrey Bunting, Wired, 5 Feb. 2022
  • In this alternate world, Teddy Roosevelt never became president and never fought the rise of megacorporations.
    Matthew Gault, Time, 26 Aug. 2019
  • And more could pursue this route as Wall Street’s performance demands and technological disruption make the top job at megacorporations less hospitable.
    Vanessa Fuhrmans, WSJ, 1 June 2018
  • At the top of the food chain is Shinra, a megacorporation that controls the city’s energy, security and media, and sits only a few dystopian notches away from the likes of Facebook and Google.
    Jason Schreier, New York Times, 9 Apr. 2020
  • The book’s characters can be augmented to perform certain actions or tasks, scrived objects are a range of artificial intelligences, and megacorporations loom over everyday life, grinding out the people who buy their wares or work for them.
    Andrew Liptak, The Verge, 23 Dec. 2018
  • In this way, a massive megacorporation such as Microsoft used its infinite resources, technical acumen and AI to deal with a major problem in several countries around the world.
    Naveen Joshi, Forbes, 18 Apr. 2022
  • Are innovation and entrepreneurship diminishing under the weight of megacorporations?
    Diego Mendoza-Moyers, ExpressNews.com, 10 Feb. 2020
  • The megacorporation's huge footprint means it's long been a major target for protests that call out its questionable labor practices, spotty record on the environment, and reliance on suppliers animal rights groups say treat their livestock cruelly.
    Ryan Smith, Chicago Reader, 25 May 2018
  • Another new episode focuses on the megacorporation MomCorp, which earlier resembled a Walmart of the future.
    WIRED, 24 July 2023
  • David Hammer is a ruthless venture capitalist hellbent on slashing and burning Sweden’s most powerful megacorporation.
    Shannon Carlin, TIME, 1 Aug. 2024
  • Our heroine is Cassandra Price, a brilliant mess of a human being eking out an existence at a megacorporation that her father’s work helped elevate into one of the most lucrative companies in the world.
    Laura Hudson, The Verge, 27 Dec. 2018
  • The secretive acts of Weyland-Yutani, the megacorporation that is apparently involved in everything in the universe, has fueled countless Alien stories.
    Daniel Dockery, Vulture, 22 Sep. 2025
  • Competition is suffering, and fewer companies are being founded, as monopolists and megacorporations come to dominate one sector after another.
    Ganesh Sitaraman, Foreign Affairs, 11 Aug. 2020
  • In a world where fossil fuel executives, meat megacorporations, and the like possess vastly more wealth and power than activists, tone probably isn’t the primary challenge in climate communication, as Kate Aronoff argued last week.
    Heather Souvaine Horn, The New Republic, 31 Mar. 2023
  • It’s set in the same alternate future where Theodore Roosevelt never broke up America’s monopolies, allowing megacorporations to take over the world and, eventually, the outer reaches of the universe.
    Emily Palmer Heller, Vulture, 11 Sep. 2025
  • Musk co-founded the lab in 2015 alongside Sam Altman after the two spent weeks discussing their fears of AI falling into the hands of profit-seeking megacorporations, namely Google.
    Eva Roytburg, Fortune, 28 Apr. 2026
  • Rising economic inequality and the creation of monopolistic megacorporations also threaten democracy.
    Ganesh Sitaraman, The New Republic, 23 Dec. 2019

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'megacorporation.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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