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antihuman

American  
[an-tee-hyoo-muhn, -yoo-, an-tahy-] / ˌæn tiˈhyu mən, -ˈyu-, ˌæn taɪ- /

adjective

  1. against or opposed to human beings or human values.


Etymology

Origin of antihuman

First recorded in 1850–55; anti- + human

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.

They spent some time with ZOE, an antihuman trafficking organization, and his life changed forever.

From Washington Times

Which may be a good reminder that skepticism is in order whenever someone waves the flag of “science” to justify the latest antihuman nostrum.

From The Wall Street Journal

It’s because those things are so vivid and so real and because he writes as an evocative novelist and fiction writer that the imposition of procrustean and sadistic—and antihuman, really—ideas upon that makes the book enduring.

From Slate

To the antihuman activists out there who call themselves “environmentalists,” this notion of saving millions of African children’s lives at the likely cost of several bird species and some crustaceans and invertebrates sounds like an Alfred Hitchcock movie.

From Washington Times

“I especially want to stress that terrorists don’t represent any ethnic group; they don’t represent any religion; their act of violence is simply antihuman and antisociety,” Mr. Bekri said.

From New York Times