Sinarquist

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English

Adjective

Sinarquist (comparative more Sinarquist, superlative most Sinarquist)

  1. Supporting Sinarquism.
    • 2000, Christopher Harris, The Novels of Agustín Yáñez: A Critical Portrait of Mexico in the 20th Century:
      In 1948, however, registration was denied to the Sinarquist political party, Fuerza Popular.
    • 2014, H.R. Morgan, Fascism, Integralism and the Corporative Society, →ISBN:
      As for those foreign people already living in Mexico are concerned, as long as they abide by Mexican standards which are laid down by the Sinarquist State, they shall be allowed to work and to live on the very same basis as Mexican citizens.
    • 2017, Henry Bamford Parkes, American Heritage History of Mexico, →ISBN:
      Anti-Protestantism, in fact, played a role in Sinarquist propaganda somewhat comparable to that of anti-Semitism in fascist movements elsewhere.

Noun

Sinarquist (plural Sinarquists)

  1. A supporter of Sinarquism.
    • 1949, Cyrus Adler, ‎Henrietta Szold, American Jewish year book - Volume 50, page 278:
      The Sinarquists numbered 300,000 and were heavily represented in the interior of the country, particularly in the Central Zone of Mexico.
    • 1999, Anne Marie Woo-Sam, Domesticating the Immigrant: California's Commission of Immigration, page 447:
      Secondly, La Opinion, the Los Angeles Spanish-language paper, published an article which defended the young Sinarquists in Los Angeles against charges that they organized and promoted juvenile gangs.
    • 2004, Eduardo Obregón Pagán, Murder at the Sleepy Lagoon: Zoot Suits, Race, and Riot in Wartime L.A., →ISBN, page 140:
      One broadcast that aired on Wednesday, 5 May 1943, blamed pro-fascist Mexican Sinarquists for stirring support for the police crackdown on working-class youths in the Mexican American community because the Mexican Sinarquists viewed Pachucos as being "corrupted by American thought and habits."

Alternative forms