Skip to main content

radicalism

/rad-i-kuh-liz-uhm/US // ˈræd ɪ kəˌlɪz əm //UK // (ˈrædɪkəˌlɪzəm) //

激进主义,极端主义,激进派,激进

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the holding or following of radical or extreme views or principles.
    • : the principles or practices of radicals.

Examples

  • It takes activism seriously, pushing past the idea that same-sex marriage was its final destination and leaning into radicalism.

  • To check in with how you may dismiss things for their pendulum-swing radicalism too easily, and not find ways to offer yourself to the balance that will lead the justifiable equality of men and women forward.

  • Biographers, as Nersessian notes, have demonstrated that Keats entertained radical political ideas, but the radicalism did not make it into many of the poems, and certainly not into these poems.

  • For Enninful, there is no limitation to the radicalism possible through his line of work.

  • The Gorge has always been a hotbed of radicalism and arms smuggling, but now it is fast becoming a shahid factory.

  • Worse, the procedural radicalism of the GOP threatens to cause another crisis at some point in the future.

  • Akkari, once infected by with the virus of radicalism, now possesses all the curiosity of a university student.

  • Even if violence and radicalism don't cross the border, the cost of the refugee crisis is becoming unbearable for them.

  • But one of the biggest factors that has helped the growth of British Islamic radicalism is marriage.

  • Tories will wax eloquent on "the pink miasma of revolutionary Radicalism."

  • In some men of warm religious feeling the Revolution excited a fervent spirit of Radicalism.

  • Furthermore, the increased radicalism of the few was more than counterbalanced by the intensified conservatism of the many.

  • Here the glise philosophique met regularly to discuss its doctrines and publish its propaganda of radicalism.

  • They come into power flushed with success, and are themselves the very dregs of radicalism.