Fascist
See also: fascist
English
Adjective
Fascist (not comparable)
- (fascism, historical) Of or pertaining to the Kingdom of Italy from 1922–1943.
- Hypernym: Italian
- 1978, Michaelis, Meir, Mussolini and the Jews: German-Italian relations and the Jewish question in Italy, 1922–1945, Clarendon Press, page 46:
- In May 1929 Hitler successfully prosecuted a libel action against right-wing and left-wing opponents who had accused him of ‘betraying’ the South Tyrol in return for Fascist gold.
- 2019, Kneale, Matthew, “seven”, in Rome: A History in Seven Sackings, New York: Simon & Schuster Paperbacks, published 2017, →ISBN, LCCN 2017045287, page 305:
- By the late 1930s Rome had new Fascist bridges, a new university, four new post offices and a number of new ministry buildings, which included, on Via Veneto, the Ministry of Corporations, that were to be Fascism’s answer to capitalist exploitation and Marxist class hatred.
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Noun
Fascist (plural Fascists)
- (fascism, historical, sometimes attributive) A member of the National Fascist Party in Italy from 1922 to 1943.
- Hypernym: fascist
- (fascism, historical, sometimes attributive) Synonym of Nazi
- 2010, German Sadulaev, I Am a Chechen!, Random House, →ISBN, 10, page 199:
- The Fascists invaded the USSR, they occupied many cities, they killed millions of people, they destroyed half the country.
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