51Թ

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View synonyms for

sympathizer

[ sim-puh-thahy-zer ]

noun

  1. a person who sympathizes.
  2. Ophthalmology. an eye that exhibits ophthalmia because of disease or injury of the other.


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Other 51Թ Forms

  • ԴDz·⳾p·ٳ󾱳e noun
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51Թ History and Origins

Origin of sympathizer1

First recorded in 1805–15; sympathize + -er 1
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

"I'm not a terrorist sympathizer," she told CNN, adding: "I'm literally just a random student."

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Although these gardens were arguably Chinese in theme, and the Chinese were U.S. allies in World War II, the suspicions hovered around Bernheimer that he was an Axis sympathizer.

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Trump has also called for the deportation of foreign student protesters whom he accuses of being “Hamas sympathizers.”

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Officials arrested a worker in the book depository building named Lee Harvey Oswald, a former Marine and Marxist sympathizer who at one point tried to become a citizen of the Soviet Union.

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But the move mirrors an executive order President Trump signed at the start of his term to deport and cancel the student visas of all “Hamas sympathizers on college campuses.”

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More About Sympathizer

What doessympathizer mean?

Sympathizer most commonly refers to someone who is supportive of or loyal to someone or something, such as a leader or cause.

The verb sympathize most commonly means to feel sympathy with someone—to share their emotions, especially sadness. This is usually understood to mean that you feel bad for them because they are in a negative situation. The word sympathizer can be used to mean someone who sympathizes in this way. It can also refer to someone who offers their sympathies or condolences, such as to someone who is in mourning.

But sympathizer is especially used to refer to someone who identifies with, supports, or is sympathetic toward a certain cause. This sense of the word is usually used in a negative way to criticize such support, and often implies that such support is secret or at least not fully open. This is the way the word is used in the phrase Communist sympathizer.

Example: We condemn not only the people directly responsible for these attacks but also their sympathizers.

Where doessympathizer come from?

The first records of the word sympathizer come from the early 1800s. The first known use of the word is by Jane Austen in her 1816 novel Emma. Sympathize is first recorded in the late 1500s and its base word, sympathy, comes from the Greek ⳾áٳ𾱲, from sym-, “with,” and áٳ(Dz), “sܴڴڱԲ.”

A sympathizer can be anyone who shows sympathy toward others. But it is most commonly used to refer to a person who identifies with or secretly supports a cause or ideology that the speaker is critical of. The most well-known use of the word is perhaps in Communist sympathizer, which gained use in the U.S. during the 1940s and ’50s. In the ’50s, it was used by Joseph McCarthy during his notorious investigations of alleged Communist infiltration in the U.S. government, when so-called Communist sympathizers were targeted for various forms of discrimination.

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How issympathizer used in real life?

Sympathizer is usually used in a negative way that’s critical of a person’s beliefs.

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Is sympathizer used correctly in the following sentence?

He has broad support, but he has lost some sympathizers due to the scandal.

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