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enabler
[ en-ey-bler ]
noun
- a person or thing that enables something, or makes it possible:
Technology is a key enabler of efficiency and productivity.
- a person who enables or supports someone elseâs bad or dysfunctional behavior:
His wife is an unwitting enabler who makes excuses for his drinking.
yĐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of enabler1
Example Sentences
His hangout is by the stationary bicycles, where he develops a rapport with Trumpâs most craven enablers.
"These are the so-called strategic enablers," he says.
He said more job opportunities and a reliable transport service - including an upgrade to the runway - would be an "enabler".
These enablers "can't be bought in a hurry at the local cash-and-carry" as one European politician put it to me.
"Europe's reliance on Washington's military capabilities, especially critical enablers such as ISR and air-to-air refuelling, will make pursuing 'independence' a major challenge without major investment in those areas."
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About This yĐÄvlog
What doesĚýenabler mean?
An enabler is someone who allows or makes it easier for someone to do what they shouldnât. Itâs especially used in the context of addiction and abuse.
The verb enable is usually used in a positive or neutral way meaning to make possible or provide someone with the power, means, opportunity, or authority to do something.
But the word enabler is almost always used in a critical way to refer to someone who allows, encourages, or makes it possible for another person to engage in behavior thatâs harmful to others, such as abuse, or self-destructive, such as drug or alcohol abuse.
For example, a parent who allows the other parent to abuse their children might be called an enabler.
Example: He asked me to go out for one drink, but I donât want to be an enabler, so I told him we could go to a movie instead.
Where doesĚýenabler come from?
The first records of the word enabler come from the 1600s. Its base word, enable, is formed from the prefix en- and the word able, making it mean âto make able to.â
An enabler allows people to be able to continue doing the harmful things that theyâve been doing to themselves or others. This especially happens in close relationships, such as between friends or partners or between a parent and child. Enablers donât necessarily need to be actively encouraging bad behavior to be considered enablers. Enablers enable in a number of ways, such as by making excuses for the person, justifying their behavior, or helping them to avoid the consequences of their actions. Sometimes, the enabling happens even though the enabler doesnât mean it to or doesnât realize that theyâre doing it. They may think theyâre helping or being supportive, but by not trying to intervene to stop behavior before it happens or to denounce it after it happens, they end up allowing or even indirectly encouraging it.
Although the term enabler is often used in the serious context of addiction and abuse, it can be used in less serious ways. A person whoâs trying to follow a strict diet may call someone an enabler for bringing junk food into the house.
Did you know ... ?
What are some other forms related to enabler?
- enable (verb)
What are some words that share a root or word element with enabler?Ěý
Ěý
What are some words that often get used in discussing enabler?
How isĚýenabler used in real life?
Calling someone an enabler is almost always negative. Still, it can be used in serious and not-so-serious ways.
it ain't about getting wise. It's actually about getting sober, and dumping every enabler in her life.
â kristen johnston (@thekjohnston)
Abusers are not the only ones upholding rape culture. Itâs also the people who defend them; itâs the family members who makes excuses for them; itâs the friends who said, âwell, it never happened to me.â
Being an enabler is violent.
â đŚâ¨ (@comachuchovos)
To put it simply:
1.) Yes, you are an ENABLER if you do not call out problematic or misogynistic behavior. Especially when theyâre your friends. And yes, thatâs just as bad.
2.) People need to be held accountable bc if no one will, said behavior will continue to be tolerated.
â Ria (@ohrianana)
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