English edit

Etymology edit

Nazi +‎ -esque

Adjective edit

Naziesque (comparative more Naziesque, superlative most Naziesque)

  1. Resembling Nazis or the National Socialist ideology.
    • 2001, David E. Brauer, Jim Edwards, Walter Hopps, Christopher Finch, Pop Art: U.S./U.K. Connections, 1956-1966, Hatje Cantz Pub:
       [] Boty in dream sequence with Naziesque nurses (fig. 57)  []
    • 2009 May 12, Leonard Zeskind, Blood and Politics: The History of the White Nationalist Movement from the Margins to the Mainstream, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, →ISBN, page 131:
      ... the Confederate Knights of the Ku Klux Klan that had then changed its name to the White Patriot Party. The hybrid organization grafted uniformed paramilitarism and Naziesque ideology onto its roots as a white-robed Klan group.
    • 2017 June 27, Virginia Heffernan, Magic and Loss: The Internet as Art, Simon and Schuster, →ISBN, page 232:
      ... my own department the gender analysis of the O. J. Simpson trial and the outrage at Camille Paglia's lusty showboating and Paul de Man's early Naziesque writings—this too was called “theory”—reminded me of the penny-ellipse problem.