English

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Etymology

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From anti- +‎ machine +‎ -ist.

Noun

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antimachinist (plural antimachinists)

  1. Someone who is hostile to machinery; a Luddite
    • 1969, Stanley L. Jaki, Brain, Mind, and Computers[1], page 259:
      The uprising of the antimachinists got under way and went on to a victorious end. It was, however, a victory marred by agonizing controversies as to where to draw the line between machines slated for destruction and the ones to be kept.
  2. (politics) An opponent of a political machine
    • 1988 March 11, Gary Rivlin, “Seven Days as Mayor”, in Chicago Reader[2]:
      Perhaps this distraction was perversely comforting for a dyed-in-the-wool antimachinist like Orr, a sense of continuity at a time of great emotional confusion.