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demonisation

[ UK /dˌiːməna‍ɪzˈe‍ɪʃən/ ]
NOUN
  1. to represent as diabolically evil
    the demonization of our enemies

How To Use demonisation In A Sentence

  • The companion to media demonisation is the hagiolatry of Western leaders and apologetics for their crimes.
  • As the two communities engaged in mutual demonisation, myths took hold. Times, Sunday Times
  • This is a complex set of challenges and they are not helped by the demonisation of money. Times, Sunday Times
  • And, make no mistake, idealisation is as disempowering as demonisation in its marginalisation; prince on the pedestal of Heaven or prisoner in the pit of Hell, beyond the veil or beyond the pale, both forms of the Paraclete are made safe by rendering them absolutes, positive and negative infinities, off the scale, outside the frame. THE HALLS OF PENTHEUS -- PART ONE
  • He criticised the demonisation of the traditional British terrace under the last government. Times, Sunday Times
  • I point to the demonisation of Muslims, the growing currency of films such as fitna and increasingly hard line attitudes towards the Muslim community in Britain. On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with...
  • We too must resist the demonisation of those who disagree with us. Times, Sunday Times
  • Not the least of the nation's preoccupations in the present situation concerns the demonisation of the particular communities.
  • The main objection to the demonisation of smoking has come from liberals who insist that it is a matter of individual rights.
  • The Empire never ended because the Paraclete's exile is enforced not just by the Emperor but by his subjugated people, Gnostic or Paulian, who valorise the divorce of flesh and soul, the demonisation of the former in Dionysian Satan and the idealisation of the latter in Apollonian Christ. THE HALLS OF PENTHEUS -- PART ONE
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