militarian
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See also: militarían
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]militarian (comparative more militarian, superlative most militarian)
- of or pertaining to the military
- 1923, Coulson Kernahan, Celebrities - Little Stories about Famous Folk, page 230:
- Naturally our talk at first was about the Scouts Movement which he [Baden-Powell] was anxious to disassociate from everything militarian.
- 1987, Joachim E. Bergmann with Shigeyoshi Tokunaga, Economic and social aspects of industrial relations, page 46:
- The employers used the authoritarian traditions in a highly selective way, adopting the authoritarian practices of militarian rule slightly modified
- 2007 May 16, “How America's 'Czars' Fare in Their Work”, in NPR:
- Anthony Cordesman is a militarian analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, DC
Noun
[edit]militarian (plural militarians)
- A person in or involved with military service.
- 2001 November 15, “IT TAKES A BRAIN TO EXPLAIN”, in St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
- For militarians, he gives the lowdown on cruise missiles and submarines. For utilitarians, there are explanations of how refrigerators and air-conditioners work
- 2001 October 2, “For Sept. 11, the hymn sung round the world”, in Philadelphia Inquirer:
- No maverick, Gibson said he just wanted to say hello and payback the militarians for their service to their country.
- 2005, Jacey Eckhart, The Homefront Club: The Hardheaded Woman's Guide to Raising a Military Family, page 35:
- Me, I've spent my whole life studying native militarians. They are an interesting people, clad in colorful native dress and participating in bizarre social customs.
- 2008 July 4, “Mugabe at the African Union Summit”, in CNN International:
- And one of the hardest things I have ever seen actually was to be there during Batsina (ph) in 2005 when he sent police and youth militarians through the townships to bulldoze people's houses.