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Showing results for syndicalism. Search instead for syndafallets.
Definitions

syndicalism

[sin-di-kuh-liz-uhm] / ˈsɪn dɪ kəˌlɪz əm /


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.

Harris even though in 1969 the Supreme Court declared criminal syndicalism laws unconstitutional.

From Salon • Oct. 11, 2019

Albiñana early adopted more than a few of the trappings of fascism, stressing imperial expansion on the one hand and a broad, economically reformist state syndicalism on the other.

From Slate • Feb. 7, 2017

In the evening, around the table, Trygve heard them talk of the Russo-Japanese War, of the abortive Russian revolution of 1905, of Norway's breakaway from Sweden, of syndicalism and the brotherhood of all workers.

From Time Magazine Archive

Another is Don West, six-foot radical poet released fortnight ago from the death cell in Pineville, Ky. jail where he had been held on a charge of criminal syndicalism.

From Time Magazine Archive

Up to that time syndicalism signified nothing more than trade unionism, and the French syndicats were merely associations of workmen struggling to obtain higher wages and shorter hours of labor.

From Violence and the Labor Movement by Hunter, Robert