English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From Euro- +‎ critical.

Adjective

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Eurocritical (comparative more Eurocritical, superlative most Eurocritical)

  1. Critical of the European Union.
    • 2017 September 29, Guntram Wolff, “A Jamaican Germany is good for Europe”, in Financial Times[1]:
      Many observers worry that an unstable coalition, or too much power to the liberal but increasingly euro-critical Free Democrats, could be dangerous for the EU and the eurozone.
    • 2018 July 29, Mark Townsend, “Farage: Bannon plan could help populists to EU election victory”, in The Guardian[2]:
      “My view is that somewhere between a quarter and a third of seats in the European parliament are going to be Eurosceptic and Euro-critical,” he said.
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Translations

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