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单词 militant
释义

militantadj.n.

Brit. /ˈmɪlᵻt(ə)nt/, U.S. /ˈmɪlətnt/
Forms: late Middle English militaunt, late Middle English–1500s mylytant, 1500s mylitaunte, 1500s– militant; also Scottish pre-1700 mylitant.
Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French militant.
Etymology: < Middle French, French militant (c1370 as adjective in sense A. 1a, 1832 in sense ‘having a combative attitude in support of a cause’, and 1848 as noun in corresponding sense) < classical Latin mīlitant- , mīlitāns , present participle (used as noun to denote a soldier) of mīlitāre militate v. Compare Italian militante (a1321), Old Occitan militanta (14th cent.), Spanish militante (c1440), Portuguese militante (15th cent. as melitamte).For metaphorical use of the church see church militant n. at church n.1 and adj. Compounds 2.
A. adj.
1.
a. Engaged in warfare, warring. Also: disposed towards war; warlike. Frequently metaphorically of the Church (see church militant n. at church n.1 and adj. Compounds 2).
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > war > [adjective] > waging war
militant?a1425
warfaring1549
belligerent1584
warring1702
operating1728
belligerous1731
co-belligerent1813
warraying1852
society > society and the community > dissent > contention or strife > [adjective] > contending
strivingc1374
strivousa1382
militant?a1425
wrestlinga1547
cocking1550
struggling1577
contending1593
scambling1600
conflictant1629
contendenta1641
tugging1657
agonous1682
battling1787
belligerent1812
conflicting1855
warring1883
duelling1944
?a1425 (a1415) Lanterne of Liȝt (Harl.) (1917) 35 (MED) Whilis þis lijf duriþ in erþe, þis chirche is clepid militaunt.
c1475 Magnificencia Ecclesie in Publ. Mod. Lang. Assoc. Amer. (1909) 24 691 (MED) The chyrche here ys werryng agayn our mortall foo; þerfore hit ys mylytant in þys lyfe transitory.
a1513 W. Dunbar Poems (1998) I. 262 Thow that art, of mercy, militant.
?1555 J. Bradford Exhort. carienge Chrystes Crosse viii. 94 Yet shoulde they [sc. the departed] in this case be discerned from the mylitaunte members, they beyng at reste.
1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene ii. viii. sig. T3 How oft do they with golden pineons cleaue The flitting skyes..Against fowle feendes to ayd us militant.
1615 R. Brathwait Strappado 223 For his abiding, hee's as in a Tent, Wherein hees militant, not permanent.
1672 Bp. J. Wilkins Of Princ. Nat. Relig. 251 Our condition, whilst we are in this world, is militant, wherein every one is without reluctancy to submit to the orders of his great captain or general.
1755 E. Young Centaur v, in Wks. (1757) IV. 223 This is a militant state; nor must man unbuckle his armour, till he puts on his shroud.
1873 J. H. Newman Hist. Sketches II. i. 1 The Church is ever militant; sometimes she gains, sometimes she loses.
1895 Argosy Apr. 187 The very air quivered with the fierce cries of men and the clamor of a city militant.
1943 Far Eastern Q. 2 398 He recognized that Japan was essentially a militant nation, ambitious to win a wider place in the world.
1982 Jrnl. Hist. Ideas 43 251 His [sc. Humboldt's] hopes attached to the cultivation of spirited individuals rather than to the independence of a militant people. War is liberating because it is an extraordinary occasion for self-development.
b. Sociology. In Herbert Spencer's terminology: designating a system of social organization in which efficiency in war is the primary aim.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > rule or government > politics > political philosophy > specific political theories or doctrines > [adjective] > other political theories or doctrines
radical1783
progressive1830
progressist1843
abstentionist1857
restrictionist1858
communalist1871
mutualistic1874
militant1876
possibilist1881
productivist1892
radical feminist1905
rejectionist1909
minimalist1917
pan-Asian1917
maximalist1918
one-world1919
Eurasian1922
gradualistic1926
Europasian1928
gradualist1931
social revolutionary1931
renovationist1934
restrictivist1936
identitarian1943
cultural Marxist1949
1876 H. Spencer Princ. Sociol. I. ii. x. 579 In the ideal other-worlds of militant societies, the ranks and powers are conceived as like those of the real world around.
1882 H. Spencer Princ. Sociol. III. §521. 662 Under the militant type [of society] the individual is owned by the State.
1918 Amer. Jrnl. Sociol. 24 317 Herbert Spencer made the distinction between militant society and industrial society the chief cornerstone of a political philosophy.
1994 Ann. Rev. Sociol. 20 7 In militant societies, military activities and military institutions take precedence over economic activities and economic institutions.
2. Of a banner, standard, etc.: military. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military organization > insignia > [adjective] > of standard: military
militant1483
1483 W. Caxton tr. J. de Voragine Golden Legende 22 b/1 The kynge of heven perdurable hath hys signes mylytant in the chirche.
1609 P. Holland tr. Ammianus Marcellinus Rom. Hist. Annot. b j The militant ensignes or banners in the Romane legion.
3.
a. Combative; aggressively persistent; strongly espousing a cause; entrenched, adamant.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > dissent > contention or strife > [adjective] > characterized by
unpeaceablec1384
contentiousc1430
battlefulc1449
sturtful1568
bateful1582
wrestlinga1593
militant1603
concertative1727
adversarial1839
adversative1849
conflictual1961
fuck you1962
confrontational1975
1603 J. Florio tr. M. de Montaigne Ess. i. xlix. 161 He would maintaine by militant reasons [Fr. par viues raisons] that the waste was in his right place.
1682 A. Radcliffe Ramble 112 Men of the Sword they say make a Division, And militant Lawyers their Wisdoms disown.
1756 E. Perronet Mitre i. cclxxxi. 62 So thou, more militant than wise, For fear the scorner should despise Thy despicable few.
1818 S. T. Coleridge Friend (new ed.) I. 162 That we be sedulous, yea, and militant in the endeavor to reason aright, is his implied Command.
1841–8 F. Myers Catholic Thoughts II. iii. §40. 147 This is a condition which must instigate to resistance in the most pacific, and to rebellion in the more militant.
1903 J. Willcock Great Marquess vi. 88 The expenses of the militant Presbyterians.
1932 E. Bowen To North xxiii. 246 Though her weariness and distraction brought the partisan in him to its most militant, what could he do?
1961 E. S. Turner Phoney War xiii. 179 There was an arrogance among certain militant pacifists which..prevented them from respecting the views of those who thought freedom worth fighting for.
1992 N.Y. Times 5 Apr. 16/4 If my mother had one rule, it was militant ecumenism in all matters of food and experience. ‘Try new things’, she would say.
b. Aggressively active in pursuing a political or social cause, and often favouring extreme, violent, or confrontational methods.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > lack of subjection > rebelliousness > militancy > [adjective]
militant1893
society > occupation and work > worker > those involved in labour relations > [adjective] > seeking change by direct action
militant1893
1893 Internat. Jrnl. Ethics 3 440 The unionist..subordinates himself to a body which aims at securing a desired end for all its members. A trade union is necessarily militant.
1896 Jrnl. Polit. Econ. 4 262 The aggressive or ‘militant’ side of the activity of trade unions was emphasized during 1893.
1904 Springfield (Mass.) Weekly Republican 7 Oct. 2 That a flop by the most militant of the unionists is under contemplation has been denied.
1914 E. Pankhurst & R. C. Dorr My Own Story i. iii. 37 That visit was one of the contributory causes that led to the foundation of our militant suffrage organisation, the Women's Social and Political Union.
1930 Daily Express 6 Oct. 11/6 Mr. Maxton leads a group of I.L.P. members who have brought a militant policy with them.
1971 J. Bishop Days of Martin Luther King, Jr. iv. 332 A few White Suprematists said that there was no doubt that the bombing was the work of..a militant black who wanted to incite his people to riot.
1992 N.Y. Times 12 July i. 6 Last month, six people died in two shootouts, pitting militant Muslims against the police and Copts, and Farag Foda, an outspoken critic of Islamic militancy, was assassinated.
B. n.
1.
a. A person engaged in war or conflict; a combatant. Chiefly in extended uses or in metaphorical contexts. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > belligerent > [noun]
militant1610
wager1611
belligerent1811
co-belligerent1813
society > society and the community > dissent > contention or strife > [noun] > one who
fighterc1300
strivera1400
contender1547
struggler1554
contentioner1593
militant1610
contendent1623
combatant1646
conflicter1658
counter-scufflera1672
agonist1687
scrambler1687
protagonist1837
belligerent1839
1610 G. Fletcher Christs Victorie 75 Looking downe on His weake Militants.
1643 Sir T. Browne Religio Medici (authorized ed.) ii. §3 Even amongst wiser militants, how many wounds have been given, and credits slain. View more context for this quotation
1752 M. Browne Sunday Thoughts (new ed.) ii, in Wks. & Rest of Creation 182 On our young Band Of Brethren, thy new-listed Militants..O shed That! with thy Gifts in Pledge, there signify'd, In large Effusion!
1814 R. Southey Let. 2 May in C. C. Southey Life & Corr. R. Southey (1850) IV. 74 Horsley was the militant of the last generation.
b. Chiefly U.S. A member of the military profession; a soldier. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > warrior > military man > [noun]
martialist1576
cavalier1589
martial?1611
militarista1616
swordmana1616
camper1631
swordsman1701
military1709
serviceman1832
militant1842
1842 United Service Mag. ii. 540 Will this modicum of embryo scientific militants suffice for every regiment?
1862 G. B. McClellan Let. 4 Aug. in War of Rebellion (U.S. War Dept.) (1884) 1st Ser. XI. iii. 355 It has been my purpose to conduct the military operations for which I am responsible with due regard to the obligations imposed upon militants by the laws and customs of civilized warfare.
1888 Littell's Living Age 7 Apr. 35/2 The weakness of nations is in actual war... Men [are] withdrawn from being productive citizens, in order to be protective militants.
2.
a. A person who strongly espouses a cause, esp. one who is aggressively active in pursuing a political or social cause. In later use also: spec. a member of an ideologically or politically motivated faction or force. Cf. sense A. 3b.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > worker > those involved in labour relations > [noun] > one seeking change by direct action
militant1909
society > authority > lack of subjection > rebelliousness > militancy > [noun] > militant person
militant1909
1851 Amer. Whig Rev. 14 490 Controversialists have a vast advantage over militants in a more sanguinary warfare.
1897 Catholic World Aug. 584 Therefore the Militants meet on the afternoon of their Communion Sunday, and recite the little chaplet of the Immaculate Virgin.
1900 Daily News 6 Apr. 6/5 They [sc. Anarchists in England] are divided into two bodies: ‘Idealists’ and ‘Militants’.
1909 Englishwoman Apr. 323 That bias has been greatly intensified amongst almost all classes of suffragists by the tactics of the militants.
1939 Theology 39 437 The lives of certain of the militants reveal that Jocism stands for strength through holiness and self-sacrifice.
1968 Daily Tel. 12 Nov. 25/1 Ultra-left militants in the Electrical Trades Union are planning another demonstration today.
1973 Black World Sept. 96/2 The young militants look down upon Anna's poetry.
1983 M. Edwardes Back from Brink v. 81 Management was faced with countless cases where union authority over their own members had broken down and our dealings with the militants were to have the effect of strengthening the union structure in an unprecedented way.
1997 Economist 4 Jan. 56/3 Assamese militants blew up three oil pipelines in November to assert their supremacy.
b. spec. Frequently in form Militant. A person who sympathizes with the views expressed in the Trotskyite newspaper Militant, set up in 1964; a supporter of the Militant tendency (see Militant tendency n.).
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > rule or government > politics > British politics > British party politics > [noun] > Trotskyist organization > supporter of
militant1970
1944 J. P. Cannon Hist. Amer. Trotskyism x. 193 The Militant was the name of the official organ of the American Trotskyists from the very beginning…The Militant signified the party worker, the party activist, the party fighter.]
1970 Militant Nov. 4/3 Now they are not ballot-rigging: they are preventing militants' names from even appearing on the ballot-papers!
1979 Economist 7 Apr. 30/3 The Militants hold all the seats on the Labour Party's Young Socialists' executive.
1985 Christian Sci. Monitor 23 Dec. 8/3 The booting out of Militants from party membership..will represent yet another victory for moderation.
2000 Herald (Glasgow) (Electronic ed.) 14 Nov. People like Jimmy Reid, Militants, and other assorted ragbags of left-wingers caused the problems which led to the demise of the Labour Party and made us unelectable.
c. In form Militant. = Militant tendency n.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > rule or government > politics > British politics > British party politics > [noun] > Trotskyist organization
Militant tendency1979
militant1980
1980 Economist 19 Jan. 18/2 The major advance which Militant has made inside the Labour party is to capture the official youth organisation.
1986 Tribune 12 Sept. 7/1 She..was one of those who walked out of the NEC's hearings into Militant.
1990 Times 8 Mar. 5/3 Many of the ‘smash the poll tax’ leaflets..are being printed by Militant—the wealthiest of the Trotskyite groups—at its East London presses.
1996 New Statesman (Electronic ed.) 19 Jan. 36 Militant was prescient enough to campaign for a separate Scottish parliament while Labour remained sceptical and other Trotskyite groups opposed it for ‘class reasons’.

Derivatives

ˈmilitantness n. rare the quality of being militant.
ΚΠ
1727 N. Bailey Universal Etymol. Eng. Dict. II Militantness, militant or war-faring State or Condition.
1999 Jewish Post (N.Y.) (Electronic ed.) May–June 3/3 A new party..calls for a fight against religious militantness in Israel.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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adj.n.?a1425
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