English

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Etymology

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Peron (Juan Perón) +‎ -ist

Noun

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Peronist (plural Peronists)

  1. A supporter of Juan Perón and/or Eva Perón and/or their regime.
  2. An adherent of modern-day Peronism, including any of the political parties that identify themselves as such.

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Adjective

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Peronist (comparative more Peronist, superlative most Peronist)

  1. Of or pertaining to Juan Perón or his regime.
    • 1985, William C. Smith, “Reflections on the Political Economy of Authoritarian Rule and Capitalist Reorganization in Contemporary Argentina”, in Philip O’Brien, Paul Cammack, editors, Generals in Retreat: The Crisis of Military Rule in Latin America, Manchester, Dover, N.H.: Manchester University Press, →ISBN, page 47:
      In a last frantic move, the Peronist government again turned to a stringent stabilization plan (i.e. another 100 per cent peso devaluation, 90 per cent increases in publicly-controlled prices, coupled with a meagre 20 per cent increase in nominal wages). [...] Some idea of this incredibly rapid 'Weimarization' of Argentine politics can be gleaned from an extrapolation of the first quarter's inflation to a 3,000 per cent annual rate. Using the March figure, the same calculation yields a fantastic 17,000 per cent annual rate.
  2. Adhering to or describing modern-day Peronism, including any of the political parties that self-identify as such.
    • 2023 October 22, Tom Phillips, Uki Goñi, “‘Bad and dangerous’: Argentina’s Trump on track to become president”, in The Guardian[1], →ISSN:
      In suburban Buenos Aires, Milei’s Peronist rival, the finance minister, Sergio Massa, asked factory workers for support despite the slump his government has overseen, with 40% of Argentina’s 47 million citizens living in poverty amid triple-digit inflation.

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