Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • verb Simple past tense and past participle of ideologise.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word ideologised.

Examples

  • Olivier Roy, the best French expert on the region, criticises Washington's "ideologised" vision of the war which divides Afghans in classic Manichean fashion into categories of good and evil.

    open Democracy News Analysis - Comments ducafeli 2008

  • So, when Dmitry Medvedev says he wants international relations to be de-ideologised, he is asking for something which Western policy-makers (especially Europeans) have either never thought about, or against which they react with fury.

    laughland a bit more plausible than mishin 2008

  • So, when Dmitry Medvedev says he wants international relations to be de-ideologised, he is asking for something which Western policy-makers (especially Europeans) have either never thought about, or against which they react with fury.

    18 « October « 2008 « Niqnaq 2008

  • Indeed, a careful analysis can do much to help focus the mind and avoid the pitfalls of over-ideologised simplification.

    CONTENTS 2007

  • Indeed, a careful analysis can do much to help focus the mind and avoid the pitfalls of over-ideologised simplification.

    What happened to the people? 2007

  • ANC principles, yet many believe that South Africa's foreign policy has been de-ideologised and that the principle of universality is being applied to international relations.

    Contents 1996

  • Nor is it an argument for sheer pragmatism, or for what some describe as a 'de-ideologised' foreign policy.

    Contents 1996

  • If Obama could succeed in including local, non-ideologised leaders of the insurgency in the process of political reconstruction, there would be hope of gradually isolating the leadership of the radical Taliban.

    The Asian News - RSS feed 2009

  • Later, in the internally de-ideologised USSR of the 70s and 80s, it was, again, not money itself but consumer goods that were the focus of society's interest - as would be expected of an economy of scarcity.

    signandsight.com 2009

  • As it has de-ideologised itself, the European left has fallen victim to the politics of

    New Statesman 2008

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.