English
Etymology
From French terrorisme, from terreur + -isme, equivalent to terror + -ism.
The word first appears in English in 1795 in reference to the Jacobin radicals of France, who ruled during the Reign of Terror.
Pronunciation
Noun
terrorism (usually uncountable, plural terrorisms)
- (historical) The system of fear and intimidation put into place during the Reign of Terror in Revolutionary France around 1793-94.
1795 July 7, Thomas Paine, The Constitution Of 1795 (Speech in the French National Convention):In England I was proscribed for having vindicated the French Revolution, and I have suffered a rigorous imprisonment in France for having pursued a similar mode of conduct. During the reign of terrorism, I was a close prisoner for eight long months, and remained so above three months after the era of the tenth Thermidor.
- The use of unlawful violence against people or property to achieve political objectives.
2012 December 14, Simon Jenkins, “We mustn't overreact to North Korea boys' toys”, in The Guardian Weekly[1], volume 188, number 2, page 23:The threat of terrorism to the British lies in the overreaction to it of British governments. Each one in turn clicks up the ratchet of surveillance, intrusion and security. Each one diminishes liberty. David Cameron insists that his latest communications data bill is "vital to counter terrorism". Yet terror is mayhem. It is no threat to freedom. That threat is from counter-terror, from ministers capitulating to securocrats.
- (by extension) The use of intimidation or bullying tactics.
1984 February 11, “GCN Gay And Lesbian Prisoner Project”, in Gay Community News, volume 11, number 29, page 2:We at the GCN Prisoner Project often get letters from prisoners who are being harassed (above and beyond the usual terrorism of the prison business) because of their being queer.
Hyponyms
Derived terms
Translations
use of terror as a means of coercion
- Afrikaans: terrorisme
- Albanian: terrorizëm (sq) m
- Arabic: إِرْهَاب m (ʔirhāb)
- Armenian: ահաբեկչություն (hy) (ahabekčʻutʻyun), տեռորիզմ (hy) (teṙorizm)
- Asturian: terrorismu m
- Azerbaijani: terrorizm, tədhiş
- Basque: terrorismo (eu) inan
- Belarusian: тэрары́зм m (terarýzm), тэра́кт m (terákt) (terror act)
- Bengali: সন্ত্রাসবাদ (bn) (śontrasbad)
- Bulgarian: терори́зъм (bg) m (terorízǎm)
- Burmese: အကြမ်းဖက်ဝါဒ (a.kram:hpak-wada.)
- Catalan: terrorisme (ca) m
- Cebuano: terorismo
- Chechen: терроризм (terrorizm)
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 恐怖主義 / 恐怖主义 (hung2 bou3 zyu2 ji6)
- Mandarin: 恐怖主義 / 恐怖主义 (zh) (kǒngbùzhǔyì)
- Cornish: broweghereth f
- Czech: terorismus (cs) m
- Danish: terrorisme c
- Dutch: terrorisme (nl) n
- Esperanto: terorismo
- Estonian: terrorism (et)
- Finnish: terrorismi (fi)
- French: terrorisme (fr) m
- Galician: terrorismo (gl) m
- Georgian: ტერორიზმი (ṭerorizmi)
- German: Terrorismus (de) m
- Greek: τρομοκρατία (el) f (tromokratía)
- Gujarati: આતંકવાદ (ātaṅkvād)
- Hebrew: טֶרוֹר (he) m (téror), טֶרוֹרִיזְם m (terorizm)
- Hindi: आतंकवाद (hi) m (ātaṅkvād), दहशतगर्दी f (dahśatgardī), दहशतंगेज़ m (dahaśtaṅgez)
- Hungarian: terrorizmus (hu)
- Icelandic: hryðjuverk (is) n
- Ido: terorismo
- Indonesian: terorisme (id)
- Interlingua: terrorismo
- Irish: sceimhlitheoireacht
- Italian: terrorismo (it) m
- Japanese: テロリズム (ja) (terorizumu), テロ (ja) (tero)
- Kannada: ಆತಂಕವಾದ (ātaṅkavāda), ಭಯೋತ್ಪಾದನೆ (bhayōtpādane)
- Kazakh: лаңкестік (lañkestık), терроризм (terrorizm)
- Khmer: ភេរវនិយម (pheirĕəʼvĕəʼniyum)
- Korean: 테러리즘 (ko) (tereorijeum), 테러 (ko) (tereo), 공포주의(恐怖主義) (gongpojuui), 테로 (tero) (North Korea)
- Kurdish:
- Northern Kurdish: terorîzm (ku) f
- Kyrgyz: терроризм (terrorizm)
- Lao: ການກໍ່ການຮ້າຍ (kān kǭ kān hāi)
- Latin: tromocratia f
- Latvian: terorisms m
- Lithuanian: terorizmas m
- Luxembourgish: Terrorismus m
- Macedonian: терори́зам m (terorízam)
- Malay: pengganasan, terorisme
- Malayalam: ഭീകരവാദം (bhīkaravādaṁ), തീവ്രവാദം (tīvravādaṁ, literally “extremism”)
- Maltese: terroriżmu m
- Marathi: दहशतवाद (dahśatvād)
- Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: терроризм (mn) (terrorizm), алан хядлага (alan xjadlaga)
- Norman: terreurisme m
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: terrorisme (no) m
- Nynorsk: terrorisme m
- Occitan: terrorisme (oc) m
- Ottoman Turkish: بلݣلمه (beliŋleme)
- Pashto: ترهګري f (trahgari), تروريزم m (trorizǝm)
- Persian: تِروریسْم (fa) (terorism), تِروریزْم (terorizm), اِرْعابْگری (fa) (er'âbgari) (rare)
- Polish: terroryzm (pl) m
- Portuguese: terrorismo (pt) m
- Punjabi: ਦਹਿਸ਼ਤਗਰਦੀ (dahiśtagardī), ਦਹਿਸ਼ਤਵਾਦ m (dahiśtavād), ਆਤੰਕਵਾਦ (pa) m (ātaṅkvād)
- Romanian: terorism (ro) n
- Cyrillic: терорисм n (terorism)
- Russian: террори́зм (ru) m (terrorízm), тера́кт (ru) m (terákt) (terror act), терро́р (ru) m (terrór)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: терорѝзам m
- Roman: terorìzam (sh) m
- Sinhalese: ත්රස්තවාදය (trastawādaya)
- Slovak: terorizem m
- Slovene: terorizem (sl)
- Spanish: terrorismo (es) m
- Swahili: ugaidi
- Swedish: terrorism (sv) c
- Tagalog: terorismo (tl)
- Tajik: терроризм (terrorizm)
- Tamil: பயங்கரவாதம் (ta) (payaṅkaravātam)
- Tatar: террорчылык (terrorçılıq)
- Telugu: ఉగ్రవాదం (te) (ugravādaṁ)
- Thai: การก่อการร้าย (gaan-gɔ̀ɔ-gaan-ráai)
- Turkish: terörizm (tr), yıldırıcılık
- Turkmen: terrorizm
- Ukrainian: терори́зм m (terorýzm), тера́кт m (terákt) (terror act)
- Urdu: دَہْشَت گَرْدی f (dahśat gardī), دَہْشَت پَسَنْدی f (dahśat pasandī)
- Uyghur: تېررورلۇق (tërrorluq), تېررورىزم (tërrorizm)
- Uzbek: terrorizm (uz)
- Vietnamese: khủng bố (vi) (恐怖), chính sách khủng bố (政策恐怖), chủ nghĩa khủng bố (主義恐怖)
- Volapük: jekälim, jekidun, jekidunot, jeikareig (vo)
- Welsh: terfysgaeth (cy) f, brawychiaeth f
- Yiddish: טעראָריזם m (terorizm)
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Swedish
Etymology
terror + -ism
Pronunciation
Noun
terrorism c
- terrorism
Declension
Derived terms
References