colonialism
noun/kəˈləʊ.njə.lɪ.zəm/UK/kəˈloʊ.njə.lɪ.zəm/US
Etymology
From colonial + -ism.
Definitions
The seizure of geographical area to extract its natural resources or exploit the labor of…
The seizure of geographical area to extract its natural resources or exploit the labor of the indigenous peoples to remotely benefit a distant country.
- Though most of the cases here cover European encounters with non-Europeans, it is not the intention of the book to give the impression that genocide is a function of European colonialism and imperialism alone.
The subjugation of a weaker country, population, or people by a dominant country,…
The subjugation of a weaker country, population, or people by a dominant country, population, or people.
- It was the racist, settler colonialism that created whiteness, that created blackness, half-caste, quarter-caste, octoroon, that saw mixed-race people as a third race.
Any form of foreign influence seen as undesirable.
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A colonial word, phrase, concept, or habit.
- Although the settlement seems so far to have made but slow progress, there are many things which show that, to use a colonialism, "the place was going ahead."
Colonial life.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for colonialism. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA