Anarchistic
a person who advocates or believes in or .
a person who seeks to overturn by violence all const-tuted forms and inst-tutions of society and government, with no purpose of establishing any other system of order in the place of that destroyed.
a person who promotes disorder or excites revolt against any established rule, law, or custom.
contemporary examples
the turfers are freakish, p-ssionate, half-baked, dignified, defiant, rude, anarchistic, but they are not republicans.
the gop freak show john batchelor august 6, 2009
historical examples
it is impossible to present here all recognized anarchistic teachings, not to say all anarchistic teachings.
anarchism paul eltzbacher
and mind, mary can hear, too; so if it is too anarchistic she will come to the rescue.
three little women’s success gabrielle e. jackson
these anarchistic doctrines had a quaint absurdity on the lips of this mild, little new england woman.
one woman’s life robert herrick
and you will find some of them as anarchistic as you will find their men.
the works of robert g. ingersoll, vol. 9 (of 12) robert g. ingersoll
there were two seals on it; one was in anarchistic red and the other in wall street gold.
h. r. edwin lefevre
“another of them anarchistic attempts,” growled one of the men.
the hero of panama f. s. brereton
we have now gained the standpoint that permits us to view comprehensively the entire body of anarchistic teachings.
anarchism paul eltzbacher
the anarchistic party was not slow to adopt the designation that was given to it.
anarchism paul eltzbacher
what a pity that so lovely a girl must be corrupted by such wretched, unsocial, anarchistic notions.
the “genius” theodore dreiser
noun
a person who advocates the abolition of government and a social system based on voluntary cooperation
a person who causes disorder or upheaval
adj.
1845; see anarchy + -istic. also cf. anarchic. related: anarchistically.
n.
1670s; see anarchy + -ist. the word got a boost into modernity from the french revolution.
Read Also:
- Anarcho-syndicalist
. also anarchosyndicalist, 1911, from anarcho-, comb. form of anarchist (adj.) + syndicalist (see syndicalism). earlier anarchist syndicalist (1907). related: anarcho-syndicalism.
- Anarthria
loss of articulate speech. historical examples motor aphasia is, he believes, nothing more than a combination of sensory aphasia and anarthria. encyclopaedia britannica, 11th edition, volume 2, slice 2 various then occurs dysarthria, and, if the path is totally imp-ssable at any place, anarthria. the mind of the child, part ii w. preyer noun (pathol) […]
- Anarithmia
anarithmia anarithmia an·a·rith·mi·a (ān’ə-rĭth’mē-ə, -rĭð’-) n. an inability to count or use numbers due to a brain lesion.
- Anarthrous
zoology. having no joints or articulated limbs. (especially in greek grammar) used without the article. adjective (of a noun) used without an article having no joints or articulated limbs
- Anas
a collection of miscellaneous information about a particular subject, person, place, or thing. an item in such a collection, as an anecdote, a memorable saying, etc. contemporary examples anas mohamed had just hung up the phone when he heard a rapping at the door. egypt’s vanished: victims of state security force kidnappings? alastair beach september […]