English

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Etymology

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From Leninistic +‎ -ally.

Adverb

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Leninistically (comparative more Leninistically, superlative most Leninistically)

  1. In a Leninistic manner.
    • 1998, Avrom Fleishman, The Condition of English: Literary Studies in a Changing Culture, Greenwood Publishing Group, →ISBN, page 53:
      [] Catherine A. MacKinnon declares that “radical feminism is feminism,” Leninistically reading liberal feminists out of the party.
    • 2015 October 8, Jürgen Habermas, A Berlin Republic: Writings on Germany[1], John Wiley & Sons, →ISBN:
      The thesis currently asserted by a number of dissidents — namely, that the system had produced from within itself a ‘counter-society’ — would suggest a potential of selfcriticism even in Leninistically corrupted Marxism.
    • 2016 September 16, Andrew Arato, From Neo-Marxism to Democratic Theory: Essays on the Critical Theory of Soviet-type Societies[2], Routledge, →ISBN:
      The October revolution, having no immediate socialist aims, was initiated by a weak proletariat with peasant support, and was directed by "Leninistically schooled professional revolutionaries."