Difference between revisions of "Dissidents"
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| − | Dissidents are people who disagree with and work to change, or bring down entirely, established religious or political systems or ideals. | + | '''Dissidents''' are people who disagree with and work to change, or bring down entirely, established [[religious]] or political systems or ideals. |
| − | The etymology of the word traces its origin to the 16th century Latin "dissidentem" meaning "to be remote, disagree, be removed from". As a noun, dissident is used to refer to Protestants. Modern usage of the noun in a political arena dates to 1940 associated with the rise of totalitarian governments. | + | The etymology of the word traces its origin to the 16th century [[Latin]] "dissidentem" meaning "to be remote, disagree, be removed from". As a noun, dissident is used to refer to [[Protestants]]. Modern usage of the noun in a political arena dates to 1940 associated with the rise of totalitarian governments.<ref>[http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=dissident&searchmode=none Etym Online]</ref> |
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| + | == References == | ||
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| + | <references/> | ||
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| + | [[Category:Political Terms]] | ||
Latest revision as of 11:42, July 13, 2016
Dissidents are people who disagree with and work to change, or bring down entirely, established religious or political systems or ideals. The etymology of the word traces its origin to the 16th century Latin "dissidentem" meaning "to be remote, disagree, be removed from". As a noun, dissident is used to refer to Protestants. Modern usage of the noun in a political arena dates to 1940 associated with the rise of totalitarian governments.[1]