xenophobia

/ˌzɛn.əˈfəʊ.bɪ.ə/

UK: /ˌzɛn.əˈfəʊ.bɪ.ə/

zɛn · ƏFƏƱ · bɪ · ə (4 syllables)

English Noun
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Definition

A fear, antipathy, or hatred of strangers or foreigners.

Etymology

From xeno- + -phobia.

Example Sentences

  • "The great sociologist Zygmunt Bauman argued that philo-Semitism and anti-Semitism both fall under “allosemitism”: literally Othering the Jew. He defined it not as resentment of what is different, which is xenophobia, but rather of what defies order and clear categories. In 1997, he wrote, “The Jew is ambivalence incarnate. And ambivalence is ambivalence mostly because it cannot be contemplated without ambivalent feeling: it is simultaneously attractive and repelling.”"
  • "The United States is not the only country where xenophobia pays dividends for politicians."
  • "Like the Communist party before it, the Front National claimed to speak for the “working class”. The class enemy was rebranded from “bourgeoisie” to “elite”, communist xenophobia about “international capital” was supplemented with xenophobia against immigrants, and the proletariat had to ally with former adversaries such as small business owners, but the essential claim of working-class dignity remained intact."
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