单词 | cominform |
释义 | Cominformn. An information bureau set up in 1947 by the communist countries of eastern Europe for the interchange of experience and coordination of activities and dissolved in 1956. Also attributive and transferred. ΘΚΠ society > communication > information > action of informing > [noun] > source of information > information bureau information bureau1869 Aslib1926 Cominform1947 1947 in Amer. Speech (1949) 24 73 The cominform, an information bureau set up by the Communist parties of nine European countries. 1947 in Amer. Speech (1949) 24 73 Considering both Mexico City and Montevideo..as headquarters for a ‘Cominform’ in the Western Hemisphere. 1948 Ann. Reg. 1947 73 The announcement on 5 October of the formation of the Cominform, with a co-ordinating office in Belgrade. 1957 R. N. C. Hunt Guide to Communist Jargon p. xii In his Cominform speech of September 1947 Zhdanov declared [etc.]. 1958 New Statesman 6 Sept. 265/2 The new Cominform is in business, and its business is the publication of a new journal from which Communists all over the world will take their cue. Derivatives ˈCominˌformist n. a supporter of the Cominform; spec. a Yugoslav Communist who advocated the return of Yugoslavia to the Soviet bloc, after its expulsion in 1948; cf. Titoist adj. and n.; also attributive or as adj. ΘΚΠ society > authority > rule or government > politics > politics of other European countries > [noun] > Croatian or Yugoslav associations or members Ustashi1932 Cominformist1955 society > authority > rule or government > politics > politics of other European countries > [adjective] > specific Yugoslav association Cominformist1955 1955 H. Hodgkinson Doubletalk 48 A journal run by Cominformist Yugoslavs in Prague. 1975 Financial Times 7 Nov. 7/4 Popular ignorance about the real meaning of the often-used term, Cominformists or informbirovci is such that already, years ago, at an opinion poll, many young people said Cominformists were some kind of African tribe. 1976 Survey Winter 62 The position does after all still have significance, as was shown by..the arrest of the pro-Soviet Cominformists only a month before Herljevic's appointment. 1984 New Yorker 12 Mar. 97/1 As the seventies continued, hundreds of people—most of them in Croatia, Kosovo, and Bosnia-Herzegovina—were convicted of ‘Cominformist’ sympathies or activities, of various crimes ‘endangering the territorial integrity and the independence of Yugoslavia,’ or of spreading ‘hostile propaganda’. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1972; most recently modified version published online March 2019). < n.1947 |
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