English

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Etymology

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From un- +‎ Aryan.

Adjective

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un-Aryan (comparative more un-Aryan, superlative most un-Aryan)

  1. Not Aryan.
    • 1955, The Cambridge History of India, page 267:
      The two last classes form one body only because they are neither of them noble (royal) or priestly or un-Aryan. No other tie unites them.
    • 2000, Jeffrey Kaplan, Encyclopedia of White Power: A Sourcebook on the Radical Racist Right:
      Thus the Reichsfolk is and will be a bastion of Aryan, ordered, beautiful, sublime and civilised values in a sub-human, ugly, profane, un-Aryan world []

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