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Definition of Militarised
1. Adjective. Issued military arms.
Definition of Militarised
1. Verb. (past of militarise) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Militarised
1. militarise [v] - See also: militarise
Lexicographical Neighbors of Militarised
Literary usage of Militarised
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. From Defence to Development: Redirecting Military Resources in South Africa by Jacklyn Cock, Penny Mckenzie (1998)
"Interviews were also conducted with key informants in nongovernmental organisations
who were working with militarised youth, and key informants in police ..."
2. The Foundations of Germany: A Documentary Account Revealing the Causes of by J. Ellis Barker (1918)
"He converted Prussia into an armed camp and militarised the whole nation. ...
Its entire government was militarised. The capital became the stronghold of ..."
3. State of the Nation: South Africa 20052006 by Sakhela Buhlungu (2006)
"... legacy is a militarised citizenship and militarised masculinism, which has
devastating social consequences and which will be very difficult to dislodge. ..."
4. Sweet Battlefields: Youth and the Liberian Civil War by Mats Utas (2003)
"216-17). Thus Connell speaks of a 'hierarchy of masculinities'. In the Liberian
case, we ought to look at a militarised masculinity which is learned by men ..."
5. The Theatre of Violence: Narratives of Protagonists in the South African by Don H. Foster, Paul Haupt, Maresa de Beer (2005)
"As with state institutions, resistance organisations became sequentially more
militarised, progressively calling for more militant actions, changing tactics ..."
6. Landscapes of Lesvos by Brian Anderson, Eileen Anderson (2004)
"Remember that this is a militarised island, and such a device would be viewed
with^raz? ... Photography As mentioned above, Lesvos is a militarised island, ..."
7. Dis-Integrating Multiculturalismby Mute by Mute (2006)
"The Federal Government's approach to Katrina revealed both a neoliberal and
militarised approach to emergencies. The government imposed itself through its ..."
8. The Cambridge Medieval History by John Bagnell Bury, James Pounder Whitney (1913)
"The whole administration had been militarised, and the same status established
which in the East under similar conditions appears as the "theme" system. ..."