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antichoice

American  
[an-tee-chois, an-tahy-] / ˌæn tiˈtʃɔɪs, ˌæn taɪ- /

adjective

  1. opposed to the concept that a pregnant woman has the right to choose abortion.


Etymology

Origin of antichoice

anti- + choice

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Many church officials and antichoice Catholics now focus on the argument that the fetus is a person from the moment of conception.

From Time

PJMedia’s Michael Walsh answers that question, in an April response to another “Cohen” ThoughtCatalog piece, this one calling for a ban on “antichoice” speech: That last claim is at least defensible.

From The Wall Street Journal

These stories go on and on, from antichoice groups pushing the pseudoscientific myth that IUDs and other contraceptive methods cause abortions or spreading falsehoods about the health risks of abortion, to the gun paranoia lobby demanding prohibitions on using public money to study gun violence.

From Salon

“Karen Handel’s resignation is welcome news to hundreds of thousands of MoveOn members who spoke out against Komen’s decision to let antichoice extremists get in the way of funding life-saving breast health care for women,” said Gena Madow, a spokeswoman.

From New York Times