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conservatism
[ kuhn-sur-vuh-tiz-uhm ]
noun
- the disposition to preserve or restore what is established and traditional and to limit change.
- the principles and practices of political conservatives.
conservatism
1/ °ìÉ™²Ôˈ²õɜ˱¹É™ËŒ³Ùɪ³úÉ™³¾ /
noun
- opposition to change and innovation
- a political philosophy advocating the preservation of the best of the established order in society and opposing radical change
Conservatism
2/ °ìÉ™²Ôˈ²õɜ˱¹É™ËŒ³Ùɪ³úÉ™³¾ /
noun
- the form of conservatism advocated by the Conservative Party
- the policies, doctrines, or practices of the Conservative Party
conservatism
- A general preference for the existing order of society, and an opposition to efforts to bring about sharp change. ( Compare liberalism .)
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ²¹²Ôt¾±Â·³¦´Ç²Ô·²õ±ð°ù±¹î€ƒa·³Ù¾±²õ³¾ noun
- ³ó²âp±ð°ù·³¦´Ç²Ô·²õ±ð°ù±¹î€ƒa·³Ù¾±²õ³¾ noun
- ´Çv±ð°ù·³¦´Ç²Ô·²õ±ð°ù±¹î€ƒa·³Ù¾±²õ³¾ noun
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of conservatism1
Example Sentences
In the U.S. two-party system, it has swallowed one of the two existing parties, usurping the role of conservatism and exploiting traditional party loyalties.
This is in line with the historically strong protestant support for conservatism in South Korea.
He said young men were "more attracted to small-c conservatism" and suggested they backed his party because they were more "impulsive" than women.
Bursts beyond, charging at defenders, moving in straight lines: this is the verticality Tuchel has always required of his teams and, in broad terms, is the defining departure from Southgate's conservatism.
Some others explained that the outrage had arisen not only from religious conservatism, but also from a fear of cultural imposition from "outsiders".
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