nativism
nounEtymology
Definitions
A policy of favoring native-born inhabitants over immigrants.
- To understand just how rare, look back into history to, say, the Johnson Act of 1924. Its national-origins quota system reverberated with nativism and racism.
- If there is to be another iteration of a Trump presidency, or a successful campaign by one of his acolytes, the scientific denial may be dialed down somewhat while retaining the reflex nativism.
- They were targeted by a virulent strain of nativism toward those from Southern and Eastern Europe that was largely about race.
The policy of perpetuating the culture of the natives of a colonised country.
A cultural element that is native to a colonised country.
- The Columbian Exchange was proof like no other of how, when it comes to food, so often the venue of our greatest nativisms, we, as human beings, easily slip the ties of belonging.
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The doctrine that some skills or abilities are innate and not learned.
A theory that some knowledge of grammar is innate.
The neighborhood
- neighborantinativist
- neighbornative-speakerism
- neighbornativist
Derived
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for nativism. 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