anti-vax

See also: antivax

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From anti- + vax.

Adjective

anti-vax (not comparable)

  1. (informal) Opposing vaccines and vaccination.
    Synonyms: anti-vaccination, anti-vaccine, (informal) anti-vaxxing
    Antonyms: pro-vaccination, pro-vaccine, (informal) pro-vax, (informal) pro-vaxxing
    • 2015 January 21, Kimberly Chrisman-Campbell, “How Fashion Helped Defeat 18th-Century Anti-Vaxxers”, in The Atlantic:
      And, indeed, fashion is already doing its part in the form of pro-vaxx and anti-vaxx T-shirts. Many of the anti-vaxx versions come pre-loaded with Libertarian subtext.
    • 2020 June 18, Kiera Butler, “The Anti-Vax Movement’s Radical Shift From Crunchy Granola Purists to Far-Right Crusaders”, in Mother Jones:
      Online anti-vax communities, most of which are on Facebook, have taken on a very different tone.
    • 2020 September 8, Michael Hiltzik, “Column: Trump attacks Biden and Harris as anti-vaccine, but he’s the one with the anti-vaxx record”, in Los Angeles Times:
      Donald Trump’s habit of projecting his own failings onto his adversaries reached a new level of absurdity on Labor Day, when he attacked the Democratic ticket of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris for “reckless anti-vaccine rhetoric” and accused them of a position that “undermines science.”
    • 2021 January 30, Nick Cohen, “Anti-vaxxers posing as victims has a history. Look at Andrew Wakefield”, in The Guardian:
      The anti-vaxx movement punches down and punches hard. Its leaders tend to be men and women from wealthy backgrounds.

Translations

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.