Citations:Everlark

Proper noun: "(fandom slang) the ship of characters Katniss Everdeen and Peeta Mellark from The Hunger Games series"

 * 2013, Nicola Balkind, Fan Phenomena: The Hunger Games, page 142:
 * Existing pairings like Katniss/Peeta (which has earned the affectionate portmanteau Peenis – or, more commonly and politically correctly, 'EverLark')
 * 2014, Fandoms Assemble, January 2014, page 16:
 * Peeniss is such a horrible ship name. Everlark is so much better, and Galeniss should be Everthorne.
 * 2015, Justin Andrews, "The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2 concludes triology [sic] on a high note", The Speaking Eagle (Juan Diego Catholic High School), 10 December 2015, page 17:
 * I am a strong supporter of Everlark (ship name of Everdeen and Mellark).
 * 2017, Romana Andò, "Girls and the Media: Girlhood Studies Agenda and Prospects in Italy", Gender/Sexuality/Italy, Number 4 (2017), page 110:
 * As to the aforementioned media universe, we can consider the contrast between Hunger Games’ couples Everlark (Katniss Everdeen/Peeta Mellark) and Everthorne (Katniss Everdeen/Gale Hawthorne);
 * 2017, Siobhan McEvoy-Levy, Peace and Resistance in Youth Cultures: Reading the Politics of Peacebuilding from Harry Potter to The Hunger Games, unnumbered page:
 * This story was written for a prompt 'Everlark Through the Ages.'
 * 2018, Catherine Driscoll & Alexandra Heatwole, The Hunger Games: Spectacle, Risk and the Girl Action Hero, unnumbered page:
 * For example, serious Katniss/Peeta shippers tend to use Everlark, but Peeniss is also used, usually to satirise the pairing.
 * 2019, "the-fab-fandoms", quoted in Lina Holst & Rebecca Ågren, "'It’s not a phase, Mom!!!': Om identitetsskapande inom fankultur", thesis submitted to the University of Gothenburg, page 61:
 * it’s okay to be an Everlark shipper who still likes and respects Gale, and it’s okay to be an Everthorne shipper who adores and admires Peeta.