judefientlighet

Swedish

Etymology

From judefientlig (anti-Jewish) +‎ -het (-ness).

Noun

judefientlighet c

  1. anti-Jewishness (hostility toward Jews)
    Synonyms: judehat, antisemitism
    • 2014 September 14, Daniel Alling, “Stor demonstration mot antisemitism i centrala Berlin”, in Sveriges Radio[1], archived from the original on 10 July 2022:
      – Å hela den tyska regeringens vägnar fördömer jag alla former av judefientlighet å det skarpaste, sade förbundskansler Angela Merkel, inför tusentals demonstranter.
      "On behalf of the entire German government, I condemn all forms of anti-Jewishness in the strongest possible terms," said Chancellor Angela Merkel, in front of thousands of demonstrators.
    • 2024 December 10, Henrik Bachner, “Antisemitism i Sverige under efterkrigstiden och idag”, in Sveriges museum om Förintelsen[2], archived from the original on 20 January 2025:
      Sedan millennieskiftet har antisemitismen åter blivit mer framträdande i Sverige. Det är delvis en avspegling av [...] att den skyddsvall mot judefientlighet som växte fram efter Förintelsen över tid försvagats.
      Since the turn of the millennium, anti-Semitism has become more prominent in Sweden. This is partly due to the fact that the protective barrier against anti-Jewishness that emerged after the Holocaust has weakened over time.

Declension

Declension of judefientlighet
nominative genitive
singular indefinite judefientlighet judefientlighets
definite judefientligheten judefientlighetens
plural indefinite
definite