˜yĐÄvlog

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new world order

[ noo wurld awr-der, nyoo ]

noun

  1. a profound change in the organization of social systems or global political power, such as the improved cooperation between formerly hostile countries after the end of the Cold War.
  2. New World Or·der,
    1. a hypothetical, secretly developing, global reorganization of social, political, and economic systems in the direction of totalitarianism, as posited by a conspiracy theory.
    2. the conspiracy theory that posits this reorganization.


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˜yĐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of new world order1

First recorded in 1845–50
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Example Sentences

I ask Mr Patrushev: "Do you have a sense that a new world order is being forged?"

From

And he is doing this in such a way that, to many, the old world order appears to be over - and the new world order has yet to take shape.

From

Emerging from World War II, a conflict against the Axis powers — Germany, Italy and Japan — that had seized empires in Europe, Africa and Asia by military conquest, Washington built a new world order that would be defined in the U.N.

From

For U.S. allies, none of that talk was as shocking as the convulsion that Trump and his lackeys delivered throughout February — a new world order that included restoring U.S. relations with Putin, even siding with Russia against a pro-Ukraine vote at the United Nations; scolding Europe and all but endorsing Germany’s neo-Nazi party, and then humiliating Zelensky in the Oval Office.

From

In this emerging new world order, America under Trumpism will not be a “shining city on the hill” and the world’s leading democracy.

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