˜yĐÄvlog

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jackbooted

[ jak-boo-tid ]

adjective

  1. wearing jackboots.
  2. brutally and oppressively bullying:

    a jackbooted militarism.



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˜yĐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of jackbooted1

First recorded in 1840–50; jackboot + -ed 3
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Example Sentences

Claiming that the internet had obviated the daily newspaper’s previous responsibility to offer “a broad-based opinion section that sought to cover all views,” Bezos argued that “free markets and personal liberties are right for America,” and that he was excited for Post Opinion to focus on those topics going forward—as opposed to, you know, the jackbooted horrors of the second Trump administration.

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His immediate predecessor in the 8 p.m. weeknight slot, Tucker Carlson, spun baroque ethnonationalist theories while fluffing dictatorial strongmen—but Watters is hardly articulate, imaginative, or ambitious enough to follow in Carlson’s jackbooted footsteps.

From

They depicted the 87,000 workers who might be hired with the appropriation as an army of jackbooted thugs poised to knock down the doors of ordinary Americans.

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They clashed swords with villains in business suits and mowed through jackbooted minions.

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Coming on the jackbooted heels of Trump’s use of Hitler’s term "vermin" to describing the large majority of the U.S. population who aren't members of his weird, violence-seeking cult — which includes many Republicans and actual Christians — I wondered whether something similar had been used by Nazi propagandists against those who criticized Hitler.

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