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  • make-or-break
    make-or-break
    adjective
    either completely successful or utterly disastrous.
  • make or break
    make or break
    Cause either total success or total ruin, as in This assignment will make or break her as a reporter. This rhyming expression, first recorded in Charles Dickens's Barnaby Rudge (1840), has largely replaced the much older (16th-century) alliterative synonym make or mar, at least in America.

make-or-break

American  
[meyk-er-breyk] / ˈmeɪk ərˈbreɪk /

adjective

  1. either completely successful or utterly disastrous.

    a make-or-break marketing policy.


make or break Idioms  
  1. Cause either total success or total ruin, as in This assignment will make or break her as a reporter. This rhyming expression, first recorded in Charles Dickens's Barnaby Rudge (1840), has largely replaced the much older (16th-century) alliterative synonym make or mar, at least in America.


Etymology

Origin of make-or-break

First recorded in 1915–20

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.

“It’s not make-or-break for a lot of these companies on these single launch events,” Kann, who covers technology, consumer and industrial firms, told MarketWatch.

From MarketWatch • May 21, 2026

With bookmakers ranking him as a 150/1 outsider to claim victory for the UK, it helps that Eurovision isn't a make-or-break moment for the 37-year-old.

From BBC • May 14, 2026

Robert Fry, of Robert Fry Economics, who currently puts the probability of a downturn at 40%, said $125 oil for eight weeks is his make-or-break point.

From The Wall Street Journal • Mar. 19, 2026

The first film is a make-or-break for many actors turned directors.

From Salon • Jan. 1, 2026

“This is the make-or-break moment,” the mystery woman with the hidden face said to Mom and Dad, as if Max wasn’t right there listening.

From "The School for Whatnots" by Margaret Peterson Haddix

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