Mots en English pour 'Small-scale propaganda.'
Vous trouverez ci-dessus des mots liés à "Small-scale propaganda.". Placez le pointeur ou le focus sur un mot pour voir sa définition, puis ajustez la recherche si nécessaire.
Résultats de recherche
- (countable) An instance of such propaganda.
- (countable) An organization or person engaged in disseminating such propaganda.
- (uncountable, also attributively) Political propaganda disseminated through art, drama, literature, etc., especially communist propaganda; (specifically, communism, historical) such propaganda formerly disseminated by the Department for Agitation and Propaganda of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.
- political propaganda (especially communist propaganda) communicated via art and literature and cinema
- The act of countering government propaganda.
- The use of information as a weapon.
- A significant ideology that information has power when disseminated.
- Commitment to the truth of one or another form of informational ontology or informational metaphysics .
- The act of undermining advertising.
- A primary aesthetic quality of the literary and/or fictional works belonging to the literary subgenre (of science fiction) called informationist science fiction, and a primary aesthetic disposition of the authors of those works or texts. Commonly included in the corpus of informationist science fiction literature are such texts as Samuel R. Delany's Babel 17, and Vernor Vinge's A Fire Upon the Deep
- Commitment to the idea that the world is fundamentally composed of, supervenes upon, or reduces to, information of some kind.
- (advertising and marketing) Spread by word of mouth with minimal intervention, in order to create buzz and interest.
- (social media) Circulated rapidly and widely from one user to another.
- (virology) Caused by a virus.
- (virology) Of or relating to a biological virus.
- (computing) Of the nature of an informatic virus; able to spread copies of itself to other computers.
- relating to or caused by a virus
- information that is spread for the purpose of promoting some cause
- plural of propagandum
- (religion, historical) The propagation of the faith by the Catholic Church by means of missionary work etc.
- (as a neutral word dated) Agitation, publicity, public communication aimed at influencing an audience and furthering an agenda.
- (derogatory) Such communication specifically when it is biased, misleading, or provoking mainly emotional responses.
noun
verb
noun
noun
verb
adj
adj
noun
adj
noun
verb
noun
noun
verb
- (countable) An instance of such propaganda.
- (countable) An organization or person engaged in disseminating such propaganda.
- (uncountable, also attributively) Political propaganda disseminated through art, drama, literature, etc., especially communist propaganda; (specifically, communism, historical) such propaganda formerly disseminated by the Department for Agitation and Propaganda of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.
- political propaganda (especially communist propaganda) communicated via art and literature and cinema
- The act of countering government propaganda.
- The use of information as a weapon.
- A significant ideology that information has power when disseminated.
- Commitment to the truth of one or another form of informational ontology or informational metaphysics .
- The act of undermining advertising.
- A primary aesthetic quality of the literary and/or fictional works belonging to the literary subgenre (of science fiction) called informationist science fiction, and a primary aesthetic disposition of the authors of those works or texts. Commonly included in the corpus of informationist science fiction literature are such texts as Samuel R. Delany's Babel 17, and Vernor Vinge's A Fire Upon the Deep
- Commitment to the idea that the world is fundamentally composed of, supervenes upon, or reduces to, information of some kind.
- information that is spread for the purpose of promoting some cause
- plural of propagandum
- (religion, historical) The propagation of the faith by the Catholic Church by means of missionary work etc.
- (as a neutral word dated) Agitation, publicity, public communication aimed at influencing an audience and furthering an agenda.
- (derogatory) Such communication specifically when it is biased, misleading, or provoking mainly emotional responses.
noun
verb
noun
noun
verb
adj
adj
noun
verb
noun
noun
verb
noun
verb
adj
- (advertising and marketing) Spread by word of mouth with minimal intervention, in order to create buzz and interest.
- (social media) Circulated rapidly and widely from one user to another.
- (virology) Caused by a virus.
- (virology) Of or relating to a biological virus.
- (computing) Of the nature of an informatic virus; able to spread copies of itself to other computers.
- relating to or caused by a virus