kamikaze
Americannoun
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(during World War II) a member of a special corps in the Japanese air force charged with the suicidal mission of crashing an aircraft laden with explosives into an enemy target, especially a warship.
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an airplane used for this purpose.
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a person or thing that behaves in a wildly reckless or destructive manner.
We were nearly run down by a kamikaze on a motorcycle.
adjective
noun
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(in World War II) one of a group of Japanese pilots who performed suicidal missions by crashing their aircraft, loaded with explosives, into an enemy target, esp a ship
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an aircraft used for such a mission
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(modifier) (of an action) undertaken or (of a person) undertaking an action in the knowledge that it will result in the death of the person performing it in order that maximum damage may be inflicted on an enemy
a kamikaze attack
a kamikaze bomber
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(modifier) extremely foolhardy and possibly self-defeating
kamikaze pricing
Etymology
Origin of kamikaze
1940–45; < Japanese, equivalent to kami ( y ) god (earlier *kamui ) + kaze wind (earlier *kanzai
Explanation
A kamikaze is a word for either the pilot or the plane used in suicide missions by the Japanese in World War II. Any job in combat is difficult and could result in death, but one duty is considerably riskier than others: being a kamikaze. These Japanese pilots engaged in suicide missions: their goal was not only to harm the enemy, but they sacrificed their lives while doing so, crashing their planes. A kamikaze could be the pilot or the plane, and you can also speak of kamikaze missions. Today, the word is sometimes used for any situation that seems suicidal or risky.
Vocabulary lists containing kamikaze
World War II
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Chapter 27: America and World War II
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Japanese History - Middle School and High School
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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.
"The economic recovery plan is not easy...We think it is a difficult process, a Kamikaze operation," Mikati said in a televised news conference after the cabinet approved the 2022 state budget.
From Reuters • Feb. 10, 2022
They also have an unusual affinity for the military: a small museum near Katoku details Japan’s last-ditch efforts to resist U.S. forces in World War II. Kamikaze boat pilots are prominently featured.
From Seattle Times • Oct. 13, 2021
The series opens with a short from Kamikaze Douga that’s like an Akira Kurosawa movie with lightsabers, complete with a droid wearing a straw hat.
From The Verge • Sep. 30, 2021
Eminem says he felt uncomfortable with homophobic lyrics he wrote and released on his recent album, Kamikaze.
From BBC • Sep. 14, 2018
Just like the first, it was destroyed by that giant wind that the Japanese began to call Kamikaze.
From "Code Talker: A Novel About the Navajo Marines of World War Two" by Joseph Bruchac
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.