Definitions

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  • noun Plural form of colonialism.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • Nearly forty years later, Paul Bowles counters Wharton's arch formalism in Spider's House, a novel that gauges the disruptive effects that European colonialisms, and their successors the Nationalists, had brought on Moroccans by using the mosque as his symbolic standard of past and present, and that has been made to alienate his lead character, Amar, from his father.

    G. Roger Denson: From Mark Twain to Malcom X: Americans Discover the Great Mosques G. Roger Denson 2010

  • Nearly forty years later, Paul Bowles counters Wharton's arch formalism in Spider's House, a novel that gauges the disruptive effects that European colonialisms, and their successors the Nationalists, had brought on Moroccans by using the mosque as his symbolic standard of past and present, and that has been made to alienate his lead character, Amar, from his father.

    G. Roger Denson: From Mark Twain to Malcom X: Americans Discover the Great Mosques G. Roger Denson 2010

  • She refers to a silent invasion on all fronts: the weapon of disinformation, the neocolonization of Latin America, the “backyard” as the “strategic reserve” of the empire, operative counterinsurgency, the “soft” blows, the informatics intoxication, left-wing groups acting together with extreme-right pro-coup sectors; the powerful enemy deliberately assaulting the soul of the peoples, their culture and identity; advanced colonialists and belated colonialisms.

    more world leaders state the obvious 2008

  • Nearly forty years later, Paul Bowles counters Wharton's arch formalism in Spider's House, a novel that gauges the disruptive effects that European colonialisms, and their successors the Nationalists, had brought on Moroccans by using the mosque as his symbolic standard of past and present, and that has been made to alienate his lead character, Amar, from his father.

    G. Roger Denson: From Mark Twain to Malcom X: Americans Discover the Great Mosques G. Roger Denson 2010

  • Nearly forty years later, Paul Bowles counters Wharton's arch formalism in Spider's House, a novel that gauges the disruptive effects that European colonialisms, and their successors the Nationalists, had brought on Moroccans by using the mosque as his symbolic standard of past and present, and that has been made to alienate his lead character, Amar, from his father.

    G. Roger Denson: From Mark Twain to Malcom X: Americans Discover the Great Mosques G. Roger Denson 2010

  • Nearly forty years later, Paul Bowles counters Wharton's arch formalism in Spider's House, a novel that gauges the disruptive effects that European colonialisms, and their successors the Nationalists, had brought on Moroccans by using the mosque as his symbolic standard of past and present, and that has been made to alienate his lead character, Amar, from his father.

    G. Roger Denson: From Mark Twain to Malcom X: Americans Discover the Great Mosques G. Roger Denson 2010

  • She refers to a silent invasion on all fronts: the weapon of disinformation, the neocolonization of Latin America, the “backyard” as the “strategic reserve” of the empire, operative counterinsurgency, the “soft” blows, the informatics intoxication, left-wing groups acting together with extreme-right pro-coup sectors; the powerful enemy deliberately assaulting the soul of the peoples, their culture and identity; advanced colonialists and belated colonialisms.

    25 « November « 2008 « Niqnaq 2008

  • Nearly forty years later, Paul Bowles counters Wharton's arch formalism in Spider's House, a novel that gauges the disruptive effects that European colonialisms, and their successors the Nationalists, had brought on Moroccans by using the mosque as his symbolic standard of past and present, and that has been made to alienate his lead character, Amar, from his father.

    G. Roger Denson: From Mark Twain to Malcom X: Americans Discover the Great Mosques G. Roger Denson 2010

  • Nearly forty years later, Paul Bowles counters Wharton's arch formalism in Spider's House, a novel that gauges the disruptive effects that European colonialisms, and their successors the Nationalists, had brought on Moroccans by using the mosque as his symbolic standard of past and present, and that has been made to alienate his lead character, Amar, from his father.

    G. Roger Denson: From Mark Twain to Malcom X: Americans Discover the Great Mosques G. Roger Denson 2010

  • Certain colonialisms in the past were very clear about their transitional character.

    'What Do You Want The Palestinians To Do?' 2008

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