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defeatism

/dih-fee-tiz-uhm/US // dɪˈfi tɪz əm //UK // (dɪˈfiːtɪzəm) //

失败主义,失败论,战败主义,败家子主义

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the attitude, policy, or conduct of a person who admits, expects, or no longer resists defeat, as because of a conviction that further struggle or effort is futile; pessimistic resignation.

Synonyms & Antonyms

as insubmission

Examples

  • In 1970, Paul Ehrlich reinforced the defeatism, saying that in a few years “further efforts will be futile” and “you may as well look after yourself and your friends and enjoy what little time you have left.”

  • It is a third way that avoids both complacency and defeatism, and we should wear the term with pride.

  • I worry there’s a sense of defeatism or giving up on the South, but this is simply not an option.

  • The post-dinner conversations of staffers and policy-makers was seamed with shame, and even defeatism.

  • Third, pulling out before any real efforts have been tried sends a message of hopelessness and defeatism more than anything else.

  • It was a country that had succumbed to paralysis and defeatism and nostalgia.

  • It seems at this point that dysfunction and defeatism are institutionally baked into the culture of the team.

  • For decades since, Britain has exercised its political resentments in the defeatism of the sporting field.

  • One of the troubles in dealing with any problem is routing defeatism and hopelessness.

  • But not because of any anti-life attitude, or pessimism, or defeatism.

  • Some in our midst have sought to instill a feeling of fear and defeatism in the minds of the American people about this problem.

  • To face the task of finding jobs faster than invention can take them away--is not defeatism.

  • The army was demoralized and saturated with the defeatism preached by the Porazhentsi.