Lookman
Lookman
Sep 1, 2018 · 1 min read

There are politically motivated people today in our Orwellian world who seem to believe that terms like Nazi and Fascist, are only for a select section of Jews to define. They want to direct history to their own outcomes and are ignorant you cannot swim against the flow. Yet, it was not just Jews who suffered in the efforts to defeat these regimes. There were also soldiers, civilians, Germans and other nationalities like Ukrainians…

The Concise Oxford English Dictionary gives a clear everyday to these terms. What matters is everyday usage today as words are not fixed definitions. Just take words like Gay.

“Fascism” (also Fascism) — A noun: an authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing system of government.

DERIVATIVES: Fascist noun & adjective, Fascistic adjective

ORIGIN: 1920s (with reference to Mussolini’s regime in Italy): from Italian fascismo, from fascio ‘bundle, political group’, from Latin fascis (see fasces).

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“Nazi” — A noun (plural Nazis)

1 historical a member of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party.

2 derogatory a person with extreme racist or authoritarian views.

DERIVATIVES: Nazidom noun, Nazify verb (Nazifies, Nazifying, Nazified), Naziism noun, Nazism noun

ORIGIN: German, abbreviation representing the pronunciation of Nati- in Nationalsozialist ‘national socialist’, probably by analogy with Sozi from Sozialist ‘socialist’.

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