See also: monarchofascist

English

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Etymology

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From monarcho- +‎ fascist.

Adjective

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monarcho-fascist (not comparable)

  1. (politics, usually derogatory) Of or related to monarcho-fascism, concerning a fascist state or system of government headed by a king or queen.
    • 1992, Haris Vlavianos, Greece, 1941–49: From Resistance to Civil War, →ISBN:
      Yet the leadership of the Greek Communist Party adopted the standpoint that the people was to be disarmed and its weapons handed to the monarcho-fascist reactionaries, making the excuse that monarcho-fascism would not be for a peaceful democratic development, and hence the people's liberation movement would be compelled to settle the question of power the revolutionary way.
    • 1996, Gerd-Rainer Horn, European Socialists Respond to Fascism, →ISBN:
      Already in the October circular which initiated this trend, the central committee's secretariat called on party members to join forces with “socialists, anarchists, republicans, nationalists; everyone in one bloc facing the fascist bloc of the various monarcho-fascist parties of the bourgeoisie."
    • 2014, E. P. P. Thompson, Carl Winslow, E.P. Thompson and the Making of the New Left: Essays and Polemics, →ISBN:
      Before the war "he advanced hostile, left-sectarian Trotskyist ideas in relation to the peasants . . . and helped the monarcho-fascist power."

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Noun

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monarcho-fascist (plural monarcho-fascists)

  1. (politics, usually derogatory) A supporter of monarcho-fascism generally; a supporter of a particular monarcho-fascist regime.
    • 1952, The Current Digest of the Soviet Press - Volume 3, page 16:
      The Greek monarcho-fascists, who put themselves in power only with the aid of foreign bayonets, suppose, not without foundations, that in the future also their fate will depend solely on suport from without.
    • 1987, Lars Bærentzen, John O. Iatrides, Ole Langwitz Smith, Studies in the History of the Greek Civil War, 1945-1949, →ISBN, page 294:
      It was the provocations of the monarcho-fascists on the one hand and "the slanders upon Yugoslavia" on the other hand "which obliged the Yugoslavs to close the frontier completely and so defend their country".
    • 2003, Martin Blinkhorn, Fascists and Conservatives, →ISBN:
      In April 1937 it united formally with the rest of the right—Carlist traditionalists, the 'monarcho-fascists' of Renovación Española and the residues of the CEDA—to form the monopolistic party of a state many would regard as 'fascist'.

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