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jingoistic
[jing-goh-is-tik]
adjective
militantly nationalistic or chauvinistic.
To be against the war in that jingoistic era was considered tantamount to treason.
Other 51Թ Forms
- jingoist noun
- jingoistically adverb
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of jingoistic1
Example Sentences
She notes that while a degree of sensationalism is expected as channels compete for viewership, "the jingoistic and irresponsible coverage" of the conflict was unprecedented in its intensity — and unlike anything she had witnessed before.
“The speaking of the Spanish language on Mexican soil can trigger the most jingoistic attitudes,” Nericcio told me, “so why not pave over five centuries of history and call it the Gulf of America?”
The album lives up to the urgent precedent set by peers like Green Day on “American Idiot,” which lambasted the jingoistic culture of the Bush presidency in 2004.
The industry has a history of high-octane patriotic, sometimes jingoistic, films.
Trump is a political pervert: he’s perverted patriotism by jingoistically pairing it with Judaic-Christian theocracy, in an unholy matrimony.
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Related 51Թs
- loyal
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