| 意味 |
Judenhetzeとは 意味・読み方・使い方
追加できません
(登録数上限)
Wiktionary英語版での「Judenhetze」の意味 |
Judenhetze
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2024/06/23 12:00 UTC 版)
語源
Unadapted borrowing from German Judenhetze (literally “Jew-baiting”), from Jude (“Jew”) + Hetze (“baiting; agitating; rabble-rousing; witch-hunting”).
名詞
Judenhetze (usually uncountable, plural Judenhetzen)
- (chiefly historical) Anti-Semitism; chiefly in the context of Central or Eastern Europe, from the late 19th century until the fall of Nazi Germany in 1945:
- (countable or uncountable) Jew-baiting (the harassment, vilification or provocation of Jews, or incitement against them, for anti-Semitic reasons)
-
1870 December 23, “Echoes from the Continent”, in The Hebrew, number 368, San Fransisco, page 1:
-
The Vienna New Free Press, of Oct. 10, reports as follows: On the 26th ult., a persecution of the Jews (Judenhetze, literally Jew-bait) took place in Gorlice (Galicia). A number of peasants forced their way into the synagogue during Divine Service, and commenced maltreating the Jews assembled there.
-
-
1873 April 7, “Riots at Stuttgardt”, in The Morning Post, number 31440, London, page 6:
-
The whole affair was a sort of revival of the Judenhetzen of the middle ages, so notorious in Germany. […] The war was in the end nothing uncommon; there ever have been wars, and all but philosophers say there ever will be; but a dear, good old Judenhetze was one of the choicest whiffs of a poetic time that could perfume the prosy air of nowadays.
-
-
2017, Laura B. Rosenzweig, Hollywood’s Spies: The Undercover Surveillance of Nazis in Los Angeles, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 58:
-
Reluctantly, Lewis sent Gutstadt the DAV investigators’ earliest reports, along with the FNG membership and mailing lists they had been given, the names of the SA members in Los Angeles, a copy of the SA drill regulations handbook published by the Nazi Party in Germany, and photostatic copies of the SA marching songs sung by the brown shirts in Germany that were “filled with ‘Judenhetze’” (Jew-baiting).
-
-
- (uncountable) A societal mood of systemic and pervasive anti-Semitism.
-
1889, Beatrice Potter, chapter III (The Jewish Community), part III, in Charles Booth, editor, Labour and Life of the People, 2nd edition, volume I, page 577:
-
The Polish or Russian nationality of the vast majority of these foreigners is an equally undisputed fact and a natural consequence of the recent outbreak of Judenhetze in Russian Poland and the adjoining territories.
-
-
1994, Milton Shain, The Roots of Antisemitism in South Africa, →ISBN, →OCLC, page ix:
-
Perhaps it is precisely because South Africa’s race problems have assumed such overwhelming proportions that attitudes toward the Jew have received so little academic attention. South Africa, after all, has not been immune to Judeophobia or, in the parlance of late nineteenth-century Europe, “Judenhetze.”
-
-
- (countable or uncountable) Jew-baiting (the harassment, vilification or provocation of Jews, or incitement against them, for anti-Semitic reasons)
|
| 意味 |
|
|
Judenhetzeのページの著作権
英和・和英辞典
情報提供元は
参加元一覧
にて確認できます。
|
Text is available under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC-BY-SA) and/or GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL). Weblio英和・和英辞典に掲載されている「Wiktionary英語版」の記事は、WiktionaryのJudenhetze (改訂履歴)の記事を複製、再配布したものにあたり、Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC-BY-SA)もしくはGNU Free Documentation Licenseというライセンスの下で提供されています。 |
ピン留めアイコンをクリックすると単語とその意味を画面の右側に残しておくことができます。 |
|
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると
|
-
1take
-
2around
-
3proper
-
4miss
-
5go
-
6bilateral
-
7victims
-
8condominium
-
9responsible
-
10shipping policy
「Judenhetze」のお隣キーワード |
weblioのその他のサービス
|
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると
|