Citations:Bolshevist

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English citations of Bolshevist

1959 1960 1961 1973 1993
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.

Adjective:

1959, Hans Joachim Heiser, British Policy with Regard to the Unification Efforts on the European Continent, number 3, a.W. Sythoff, page 91:
Nowadays these two components cannot be handled solely from a national standpoint; but, on the other hand, they are jeopardized by the aims of the community of Bolshevist States combined in the Eastern bloc.
1960, Sudeten Bulletin, volumes 8–9, Sudeten German Archive, page 171:
We can be sure indeed that the Russian and Chinese Bolshevist blocks are not marching against each other, but side by side, and that they have separate goals that do not overlap, although they are commonly aspiring to them.
1961, Theodor Schieder, Documents on the expulsion of the Germans from Eastern-Central-Europe, volume 1, Federal Ministry for Expellees, Refugees and War Victims, page 119:
This, however, must be avoided, as, according to the increasing sovietization of all branches of life in Poland just as in the other Bolshevist states, production must be increased and the fulfilment of the economic plans had become the chief political commandment.
1973, Hugh W. Hosch, The fantastic journey of Walther von Windsack, Exposition Press, page 81:
This was all well and good, except for the fact that we had landed, as it developed, not in Nicaragua but in Bolshevist Cuba.
1993, Ben Agger, Gender, Culture, and Power, Praeger, →ISBN, page 76:
And because these feminists were liberal and not leftist (few were in the 1960s), the recent collapse of Bolshevist states segues into postmodern theory inasmuch as liberals, like neoconservatives, have always accepted the conflation of Marx, Marxism, and Marxism-Leninism.