[
UK
/ˌɪntənˈæʃənəlˌɪzəm/
]
[ US /ɪnɝˈnæʃənəˌɫɪzəm, ɪntɝˈnæʃənəˌɫɪzəm/ ]
[ US /ɪnɝˈnæʃənəˌɫɪzəm, ɪntɝˈnæʃənəˌɫɪzəm/ ]
NOUN
- the doctrine that nations should cooperate because their common interests are more important than their differences
-
quality of being international in scope
he applauded the internationality of scientific terminology
How To Use internationalism In A Sentence
- This sense of internationalism can be traced right back to when Karl Marx and Frederick Engels wrote the Communist Manifesto in the 1840s.
- The return of the popes to Rome after their exile in Avignon in the second decade of the century probably encouraged a new internationalism, as Dufay's career in Rome and his relations with Florence, Ferrara, and Rimini show.
- In the long term, one of the greatest threats to human liberty is internationalism.
- Older traditions of internationalism and isolationism have been revived and adapted to post-cold war conditions.
- The club should be congratulated for this tremendous example of internationalism.
- First, the Liverpool dockworkers should not be seen as emblematic of a new form of labor internationalism.
- Fukuyama's solution...can better be described as ineffectual internationalism. Daimnation!: "Ineffectual internationalism": The failings of Francis Fukuyama
- France, he insisted, wants a "new internationalism" based on multilateralism and compliance with international law.
- Internationalism and its call for collective sovereignty - like socialism - may sound like the new messiah to dewy-eyed idealists.
- This work is driven by our strong belief in internationalism, a commitment to professionalism and an enthusiasm for creativity.