Nobel Peace Prize
Definition
The Nobel Peace Prize is one of the five Nobel Prizes established by the last will and testament of Alfred Nobel, Swedish inventor and philanthropist, awarded annually since 1901 to individuals, organizations, or movements that have made the most outstanding contribution to peace efforts globally.
Examples
After negotiating a truce between rival pizza topping factions, the delivery guy finally snagged the Nobel Peace Prize.
The Nobel Peace Prize committee surprised everyone by awarding it to the first app that mutes family group chats during dinner.
In a bold move, the Nobel Peace Prize went to the inventor of decaf coffee, saving countless baristas from caffeine-fueled arguments.
Politicians dream of the Nobel Peace Prize, but most end up with participation trophies from international photo ops.