Ruscism
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Ruscism
Summary
Ruscism is a neologism[1]. Ruscism draws 1,137 Wikipedia views per month (neologism category, ranking #9 of 55).[2]
Key Facts
- Ruscism's instance of is recorded as neologism[3].
- Ruscism's instance of is recorded as blend word[4].
- Ruscism's instance of is recorded as slur[5].
- Ruscism's instance of is recorded as ideological cliché[6].
- Russia is named after Ruscism[7].
- fascism is named after Ruscism[8].
- Ruscism's Commons category is recorded as Rashism[9].
- Ruscism's country of origin is recorded as Ukraine[10].
- Ruscism's facet of is recorded as Russian information war against Ukraine[11].
- Ruscism's described by source is recorded as Le Monde[12].
- Ruscism's used by is recorded as anti-Russian propaganda[13].
- Ruscism's has effect is recorded as Godwin's law[14].
- Ruscism's has characteristic is recorded as demonizing the enemy[15].
- Ruscism's manifestation of is recorded as hate speech[16].
- Ruscism's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'uk', 'text': 'рашизм'}[17].
- Ruscism's different from is recorded as Russian fascism[18].
Body
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include neologism[3], blend word[4], slur[5], and ideological cliché[6].
History and Context
Things named after include Russia[7], a sovereign state[19], in Russia[20], founded in 1991[21] and fascism[8], a political system[22].
Why It Matters
Ruscism draws 1,137 Wikipedia views per month (neologism category, ranking #9 of 55).[2] Ruscism has Wikipedia articles in 20 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] Ruscism is known by 18 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]