Naziïsm

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See also: Naziism

English[edit]

Noun[edit]

Naziïsm (uncountable)

  1. Rare form of Nazism.
    • 1936, Anglican Theological Review, pages 63–64:
      The nine chapters of the book portray the story of the conflict between Romanism and Naziïsm from an early moment when it was first realized that the latter was not only a political movement but also a “Weltanschauung,” a philosophy of life. The opposition of the Roman Church began against Naziïsm at the very moment when it was realized that the ethical, the moral and racial teachings of the National Socialist Party were fundamentally contradictive of Catholic Christianity.
    • 1936, Erich A[lbert] Walter, Essay Annual, Scott, Foresman and Company, page 67:
      Besides the great names familiar to every newspaper reader today, the petals have formerly included Dollfuss of Austria; Goebbels of Germany, who was not allowed to speak lest he indulge in Naziïsm, was nicknamed “Mahatma Propagandi,” and is remembered as the man who needed more detectives than anyone else;
    • 1952, Harry Elmer Barnes, Howard Paul Becker, Social Thought from Lore to Science: A History and Interpretation of Man’s Ideas about Life with His Fellows, page 663:
      Moreover, the fact that Fascism and Naziïsm have both erected façades with guild socialist or syndicalist motifs has diminished the popularity of these latter doctrines among left-wing ideologists.
    • 1966, Russell Warren Howe, Black Africa: Volume II: From the Colonial Era to Modern Times, New York, N.Y.: Walker and Company, page 147:
      In Afrikaner nationalism, strains of religious zionism, Naziïsm and Dixiecracy are mysteriously interwoven in one of the most potent political cocktails of modern time.
    • 1969, Russell Warren Howe, The African Revolution, New African Library, →ISBN, pages 180–181 and 198:
      By then, separate Afrikaner labor unions under Albert Hertzog, the general’s son, had been started to circumvent the anti-Naziïsm of English South African trade unionists. [] German Naziïsm gave new hope and meaning to Afrikaner political life. [] Originally anyone who opposed Naziïsm in South Africa, from missionaries to professors, was labeled ‘Communist’;