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partisanism

American  
[pahr-tuh-zuh-niz-uhm, -suh-] / ˈpɑr tə zəˌnɪz əm, -sə- /

noun

  1. partisan action or spirit.


Etymology

Origin of partisanism

First recorded in 1885–90; partisan 1 + -ism

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.

Bunch reflected: “I think that there are always moments in America where you have these tensions, where there are battles over what does it mean to be an American, what is America’s identity. My goal is to help people transcend partisanism, to try to bring people together around history, culture and science.”

From The Guardian

There are few things more predictable in mainstream American politics than blind, dogmatic partisanism.

From Salon

Only in a single instance was anything said that seemed obnoxious to a nice sense of propriety, or that marred the harmony of an almost universally expressed sentiment of patriotic approval of what was doing to preserve the life of the nation—a sentiment in which partisanism or party politics cut no figure whatever.

From Project Gutenberg

The universality of poetry, as contrasted with a narrow "German" clumsiness, is blandly defended, and a joyous abandon is urged as something better than the meticulous anxiety of chauvinistic partisanism.

From Project Gutenberg