Definition of "gimme"
gimme
contraction
noun
plural gimmes
(colloquial) That which is easy to perform or obtain, especially in sports.
Quotations
You have to swipe along to page three of Fifa's world rankings before catching sight of the Faroe Islands, perched in 114th place, nearly 70 spots below Scotland. But under Hakan Ericson, they no longer represent the gimme fixture most in world football once reckoned them to be.
2021 October 12, Jamie Lyall, “Faroe Islands 0-1 Scotland”, in BBC Sport
That which is simply given away for nothing; a freebie.
Quotations
The Trojan horse gimme typically arrives as an e-mail attachment promising something for nothing (that is, a “gimme”)—maybe a fun free screen saver, […]
2008 April 1, Alan Axelrod, PhD, Guy Antinozzi, J.D., The Complete Idiot's Guide to Campus Safety: Essential Safety Tips Every College Student Should Know, Penguin, page 88
Our first answered prayer is Salvation—the entry of Christ— but that is a “gimme,” it is a “freebie,” for God has already answered this prayer for everyone, even before he or she asks.
2012 November 28, R. Crafton Gibbs, Eternal Life with God: Logos 1, of Writing God's Book of Life, R. Crafton Gibbs / Google Books Play, page 181
That which is certain; that which is sure to be the case.
Quotations
Imani: Well, yeah, I was smoking a lot of weed back then, that's a gimme. At the Manor it was really just smoking. Stress smoking. We didn't have no chronic at the time—there were some mushrooms here and there.
2009 March 12, Brian Coleman, Check the Technique: Liner Notes for Hip-Hop Junkies, Villard, page 332
Didn't wear any rings, and if she had worn some, they would have contained purple stones, that was a gimme. A nightmarish thought flashed through his head. Him waking on a Sunday morning, finding Cresta there in his bed beside him, […]
2011 08, David Carter, The Murder Diaries - Seven Times Over: Seven Times Over, Lulu.com, page 182
The staid and uncool Democratic Establishment, by blowing a gimme election, had discredited itself.
2019 March 3, Simon van Zuylen-Wood, “When Did Everyone Become a Socialist?”, in New York Magazine