English
Etymology
From left + -ist .
Pronunciation
Noun
leftist (plural leftists )
( politics , generally) A person who holds views associated with the political left .
Synonym: left-winger
Coordinate terms: centrist , rightist
1976 , June Teufel Dreyer, China's Forty Millions: Minority Nationalities and National Integration in the People's Republic of China [1] , Harvard University Press , →ISBN , →LCCN , →OCLC , →OL , page 214 :The first major clash between the two groups occurred in Shih-ho-tzu on January 26, 1967, with the leftists admitting they had suffered a bloody defeat.
( politics , specifically) Someone who holds socialist or communist -leaning economic views, usually alongside progressive social views; an anticapitalist .
Derived terms
Translations
a person who holds views associated with the political left
Arabic: يَسَارِيّ m ( yasāriyy ) يَسَارِيّة f ( yasāriyya )
Belarusian: левый m ( ljevyj ) , левая f ( ljevaja )
Bulgarian: левичар (bg) m ( levičar )
Catalan: esquerrà (ca) , esquerrer (ca)
Czech: levičák (cs) m
Danish: venstreorienteret c
Esperanto: maldekstrulo , livulo
Finnish: vasemmistolainen (fi)
Georgian: მემარცხენე ( memarcxene )
German: Linker (de) m , Linke (de) f ( female )
Greek: αριστεριστής (el) m ( aristeristís )
Hebrew: שְׂמֹאלָנִי m ( s'molaní ) , שְׂמֹאלָנִית f ( s'molanít )
Icelandic: vinstrimaður m
Italian: sinistroide (it) m or f
Kazakh: солшыл ( solşyl )
Macedonian: левичар m ( levičar )
Mongolian: зүүнтэн (mn) ( züünten )
Persian: چپگرا ( čap-gerâ )
Polish: lewicowiec (pl) m
Portuguese: esquerdista (pt) m or f
Romanian: stângist (ro) m
Serbo-Croatian: lèvičār m , ljèvičār (sh) m , лѐвича̄р m , љѐвича̄р m
Spanish: izquierdista (es) m or f , izquierdoso m
Tagalog: maka-kaliwa
Turkish: solcu (tr)
Yiddish: לינקיסט m ( linkist ) , לינקער m ( linker ) , לינקע f ( linke )
Adjective
leftist (comparative more leftist , superlative most leftist )
Of or pertaining to the political left.
Derived terms
Translations
Pertaining to the political left
See also
Anagrams