xenophobic
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From xeno- -phobic, from Ancient Greek ξένος (xénos, “foreign, strange”) φόβος (phóbos, “fear”).
Adjective
[edit]xenophobic (comparative more xenophobic, superlative most xenophobic)
- Exhibiting or characterised by xenophobia, a fear or hatred of strangers or foreigners.
- Synonyms: xenophobous; see also Thesaurus:xenophobic
- Antonym: xenophilic
- 2006 May 13, Weekend Argus:
- Residents of Plettenberg Bay this week launched violent xenophobic attacks on foreign Africans living in informal settlements, beating them and ransacking their houses
- 2019 May 17, “The Guardian view on the Venice Biennale’s migrant boat: pushing the limits of art”, in The Guardian[1]:
- It has not yet promised much in the way of serious debate about the migrant crisis or the EU’s failure to tackle it in a humane and coordinated manner, in the context of the Italian government’s increasingly xenophobic policies.
Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]exhibiting or characterised by xenophobia
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Noun
[edit]xenophobic (plural xenophobics)
- A xenophobe.
- 2008 April 16, Martin J. Brown, “Don’t Give Up on the Games, or Olympic Ideals”, in New York Times[2]:
- So Buzz Bissinger sees fit that we give up on the ideal of Olympism and give in to xenophobics, terrorists, drug abusers, profiteers and human rights abusers?
Translations
[edit]xenophobe — see xenophobe