ideologuei‧de‧o‧logue /ˈaɪdiəˌlɒɡ $ -ˌlɒːɡ, -ˌlɑːɡ/ (also i‧de‧ol‧o‧gist /ˌaɪdiˈɒlədʒɪst $ -ˈɑːl-/) noun [countable] ideologueOrigin:
1800-1900 French idéologue, from idéologie; ➔ IDEOLOGY - Although known as a technocrat rather than an ideologue, Yeutter's conservative credentials were impeccable.
- Despite, or perhaps because of, these successes Channel Four is also under scrutiny from the ideologues and reformers.
- Finally, we are not ideologues.
- He was perilously close to losing control over House Republicans, especially the newly-elected class of 73 right-wing ideologues.
- In practice the administrative shift away from environmentalism was much less dramatic than ideologues like Newman were insisting.
- It also had its own ideologues.
- More rigorous ideologues of the left boycotted what they dubbed an illegal election.
- Unlike many of his dancers, Horton was a romantic rather than an ideologue.
nounideologyideologueadjectiveideologicaladverbideologically