Definition of eliminationist in English:
eliminationist
adjectiveɪlɪmɪˈneɪʃ(ə)nɪstəˌlɪməˈneɪʃənəst
Denoting or relating to the belief or policy that a particular group of people should be expelled or eradicated.
their eliminationist rhetoric
Example sentencesExamples
- This particular type of rhetoric using violent imagery, Nazi and terrorist comparisons, and revolting physical descriptions, can only be described as eliminationist.
- Our leaders seem to have laid the grounds for a virulent eliminationist ideology.
- While the left has plenty of people who cannot be called angels, it's the right that makes a profit at this violent, eliminationist discourse.
- Apply that belief to terrorism and you can see why people respond to talk radio eliminationist rants and Rambo rhetoric.
- The new system is eliminationist and aims to make whole categories of people disappear.
- Legal bans, eliminationist campaigns, and censorship are the means of subordinating effeminacy that refuses to know its place.
- There is a uniquely murderous, indeed "eliminationist" form of antisemitism alive in this world and we seem utterly determined to turn our faces away from it.
nounɪlɪmɪˈneɪʃ(ə)nɪstəˌlɪməˈneɪʃənəst
An advocate or supporter of the belief or policy that a particular group of people should be expelled or eradicated.
she's a racist and an eliminationist
Example sentencesExamples
- If past conferences are any guide, this one shouldn't disappoint even the staunchest eliminationist.
- The rise of the eliminationists is unique to modernity, however.
- The idea that questions of nationality and citizenship could be solved by brutal population elimination inspired a generation of the most toxic extremists or eliminationists.
- Reporters have been fired, celebrities have deleted tweets, and mainstream media have changed headlines, all to assuage the tender feelings of the eliminationists.
- They were eliminationists who simply drew the line at murder.
- He has documented how these racists and eliminationists are given permission by mainstream figures to let their bigot flag fly.
Definition of eliminationist in US English:
eliminationist
adjectiveəˌliməˈnāSHənəstəˌlɪməˈneɪʃənəst
Denoting or relating to the belief that a particular group of people should be expelled or eradicated.
their eliminationist rhetoric
Example sentencesExamples
- This particular type of rhetoric using violent imagery, Nazi and terrorist comparisons, and revolting physical descriptions, can only be described as eliminationist.
- The new system is eliminationist and aims to make whole categories of people disappear.
- Apply that belief to terrorism and you can see why people respond to talk radio eliminationist rants and Rambo rhetoric.
- Our leaders seem to have laid the grounds for a virulent eliminationist ideology.
- Legal bans, eliminationist campaigns, and censorship are the means of subordinating effeminacy that refuses to know its place.
- While the left has plenty of people who cannot be called angels, it's the right that makes a profit at this violent, eliminationist discourse.
- There is a uniquely murderous, indeed "eliminationist" form of antisemitism alive in this world and we seem utterly determined to turn our faces away from it.
nounəˌliməˈnāSHənəstəˌlɪməˈneɪʃənəst
An advocate or supporter of the belief or policy that a particular group of people should be expelled or eradicated.
racists and eliminationists
Example sentencesExamples
- He has documented how these racists and eliminationists are given permission by mainstream figures to let their bigot flag fly.
- The idea that questions of nationality and citizenship could be solved by brutal population elimination inspired a generation of the most toxic extremists or eliminationists.
- They were eliminationists who simply drew the line at murder.
- If past conferences are any guide, this one shouldn't disappoint even the staunchest eliminationist.
- Reporters have been fired, celebrities have deleted tweets, and mainstream media have changed headlines, all to assuage the tender feelings of the eliminationists.
- The rise of the eliminationists is unique to modernity, however.