释义 |
Definition of propagandist in English: propagandistnoun prɒpəˈɡandɪstˌprɑpəˈɡændəst derogatory A person who disseminates propaganda. a highly persuasive political propagandist Example sentencesExamples - As the war looms closer warmongering propagandists will step up their flag-waving jingoism and attacks on so called ‘traitors’.
- Today's people are crude propagandists with a lust for power.
- Walsh points out that German propagandists and journalists were charged before the Nuremberg tribunal for similar complicity in the Nazi war crimes.
- Germany under the Kaiser was not the monstrous regime it was made out to be by the propagandists of the British empire at the time the war broke out.
- Low standards of education have left citizens vulnerable to exploitation by extremists and terrorist propagandists.
- What this means is that several modern artists no longer wish to see themselves as minions or propagandists of a social mission.
- Like most propagandists, he measures individuals according to his own rigid standard of how they should have thought and acted.
- Who wins elections is not (much as they'd prefer you not to remember) governed by the propagandists.
- For decades, the propagandists of ‘economic reform’ have held up the US as proof that their program will work.
- They may be propagandists for war criminals or thugs.
Synonyms advocate, champion, supporter, promoter, proponent, exponent, campaigner, crusader, publicist, evangelist, apostle, proselytizer, indoctrinator informal plugger, spin doctor
adjective prɒpəˈɡandɪstˌprɑpəˈɡændəst derogatory Consisting of or spreading propaganda. Example sentencesExamples - The type of draconian legislation that produces such abuses is not so much designed to tackle terrorism as to manufacture an illusion of it for propagandist purposes.
- Her heritage of social activism influenced her to use her fiction and drama as propagandist tools.
- This vestigial remnant of Christianity turns protesters into propagandist missionaries.
- The ability to provide real and ready financial aid is totally different from a continuous provision of propagandist advice only.
- It had a great deal more credibility than the ephemeral, propagandist organs in which radical views were usually aired.
- For most of them, they have grown up hearing distant propagandist rumblings from the mainland all their life, and in the tradition of the boy who cried wolf, the fear is rather underwhelming.
- Over the years, the images on stamps have become the medium for transmission of propagandist messages about the country of issue to its citizens and the rest of the world.
- Specialist and propagandist historians have tended to look at the religious phenomena in isolation from this cultural context.
- He unpicks, scene by scene, the absurd, long-forgotten propagandist works of both sides.
- The theater was to be run ‘on broad propagandist lines,’ but ‘non-sectarian and nonpolitical.’
Derivatives noun derogatory The weak fictional element, propagandism and poor editing can be attributed to the experimental nature of the film.
adjective prɒpəɡanˈdɪstɪkˌprɑpəˌɡænˈdɪstɪk derogatory As we have seen, Richardson follows the Whig propagandistic practice of conflating tyranny and absolutism. Example sentencesExamples - I believe we may expect another upwards spiral of completely unfounded populist, propagandistic documents, which will involve no analysis of any profound processes of world social development.
- Hohmann reached freely into the propagandistic stock-in-trade of Hitler and Goebbels.
- He is also reported to have made propagandistic broadcasts from North Korea on January 29, February 17, and March 10, 1965.
- It is not a matter of pining after a more realistic ending, or for that matter after a cheap propagandistic ending.
adverbprɒpəɡanˈdɪstɪk(ə)li derogatory This fact is occasionally used propagandistically to claim uniqueness: this idealism which burns for the Fuhrer and the idea supposedly represents the novel, the unique element of this mass movement. Example sentencesExamples - Of all the cruel notions propagandistically foisted upon them, the idea that a fancy education could impart to them an opportunity to acquire wisdom is the most damaging of all.
Definition of propagandist in US English: propagandistnounˌpräpəˈɡandəstˌprɑpəˈɡændəst derogatory A person who promotes or publicizes a particular organization or cause. a highly persuasive political propagandist Example sentencesExamples - As the war looms closer warmongering propagandists will step up their flag-waving jingoism and attacks on so called ‘traitors’.
- Who wins elections is not (much as they'd prefer you not to remember) governed by the propagandists.
- Germany under the Kaiser was not the monstrous regime it was made out to be by the propagandists of the British empire at the time the war broke out.
- Today's people are crude propagandists with a lust for power.
- Like most propagandists, he measures individuals according to his own rigid standard of how they should have thought and acted.
- What this means is that several modern artists no longer wish to see themselves as minions or propagandists of a social mission.
- Walsh points out that German propagandists and journalists were charged before the Nuremberg tribunal for similar complicity in the Nazi war crimes.
- Low standards of education have left citizens vulnerable to exploitation by extremists and terrorist propagandists.
- They may be propagandists for war criminals or thugs.
- For decades, the propagandists of ‘economic reform’ have held up the US as proof that their program will work.
Synonyms advocate, champion, supporter, promoter, proponent, exponent, campaigner, crusader, publicist, evangelist, apostle, proselytizer, indoctrinator
adjectiveˌpräpəˈɡandəstˌprɑpəˈɡændəst derogatory Consisting of or spreading propaganda. Example sentencesExamples - For most of them, they have grown up hearing distant propagandist rumblings from the mainland all their life, and in the tradition of the boy who cried wolf, the fear is rather underwhelming.
- It had a great deal more credibility than the ephemeral, propagandist organs in which radical views were usually aired.
- This vestigial remnant of Christianity turns protesters into propagandist missionaries.
- Over the years, the images on stamps have become the medium for transmission of propagandist messages about the country of issue to its citizens and the rest of the world.
- Her heritage of social activism influenced her to use her fiction and drama as propagandist tools.
- He unpicks, scene by scene, the absurd, long-forgotten propagandist works of both sides.
- Specialist and propagandist historians have tended to look at the religious phenomena in isolation from this cultural context.
- The type of draconian legislation that produces such abuses is not so much designed to tackle terrorism as to manufacture an illusion of it for propagandist purposes.
- The theater was to be run ‘on broad propagandist lines,’ but ‘non-sectarian and nonpolitical.’
- The ability to provide real and ready financial aid is totally different from a continuous provision of propagandist advice only.
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