Use of jingoism in Sentences. 18 Examples

The examples include jingoism at the start of sentence, jingoism at the end of sentence and jingoism in the middle of sentence

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jingoism at the end of sentence


  1. It was reflexive for liberals to rail at President George W. Bush for jingoism.
  2. Avoid making criticism based on personal moral grounds, spirituality, or jingoism .
  3. The second turn saw the change to the conservative, traditional moralism and jingoism.
  4. Many were religious authorities forced to take part in the movement by military men and were inhibited by the barracks-room jingoism.
  5. In England, if one simply considers the number of people involved, it is probable that the dominant form of nationalism is old-fashioned British jingoism.

jingoism in the middle of sentence


  1. Patriotism can turn into jingoism very quickly.
  2. Only the most narrow jingoism can allow us to deny this.
  3. Patriotism can turn into jingoism and intolerance very quickly.
  4. Their jingoism alienated supporters among Bangkok's middle classes.
  5. They deliver a newscast that lacks the jingoism of its many competitors.
  6. They have stripped the veneer of jingoism from the play, by showing war in its true horror.
  7. The War threatened to sweep away such fears in the uninhibited jingoism that greeted the outbreak of hostilities.
  8. Critics of the war in Afghanistan (and perhaps even its supporters) will detect at least a whiff of jingoism in the game.
  9. Their jingoism alienated supporters among Bangkok's middle classes. They got little kudos for boycotting the elections (see article).
  10. In home politics he was a Little Englander, a true hater of jingoism and imperialism, and according to his lights a true friend of democracy.
  11. Britain also has an appalling record of imperialism and pig-headed jingoism, and when you wave the flag, no one can be sure which record you are celebrating.
  12. WE PLEDGE TO DO all we can to guard against the harmful temptations - especially those of arrogance and jingoism - to which nations at war so often seem to yield.
  13. For example, the perception that Asian men are sneaky and traitorous is founded entirely on wartime hysteria and jingoism following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

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