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Word: monarcho (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...engineer, even has a vision of the future: "Huge tractors rushing out into the steppe, then corn, lots and lots of corn . . . Anybody would feel happy in such a factory. And there are other things: there's Hamlet." It was "the other things" represented by Hamlet-a monarcho-fascist intellectual degenerate if ever there was one-that got Ehrenburg into all his trouble. The Thaw's plot may be summarized as the ups and downs of a pack of dull-spirited clods on the greasy pole of Soviet respectability. Will Jurayliov with his uncultured principles continue as factory...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Still Cold Inside | 10/10/1955 | See Source »

...clock one morning last week, Italy's Communists, fellow-traveling Nenni Socialists and their strange allies, the monarcho-fascists, opened their last-ditch battle against Premier Alcide de Gasperi's electoral reform bill. Not until 76 hectic hours later did the battle end. The chamber of the Italian Senate by then was a shambles of broken chairs, torn books and blood spatters; at least a dozen wounded Senators and Cabinet Ministers stumbled about in the wreckage. But the unholy alliance had lost and refused even to cast its votes. The final vote...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ITALY: De Gasperi's Victory | 4/6/1953 | See Source »

...five years, De Gasperi's Christian-Democratic (Catholic) Party, and the three parties which work in partnership with him, have had a substantial majority (63.7%) in the Chamber. But the strength of Italy's antidemocrats at both ends of the spectrum, the Communists and the monarcho-fascists, is growing. De Gasperi fears what he recently called "the prospect of the two extreme wings joining hands to create . . . a paralysis of the parliamentary system." Though many democrats are disquieted by the reform law, De Gasperi argues that democracy must be made secure enough to survive...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ITALY: De Gasperi's Victory | 4/6/1953 | See Source »

Next day was Malik's last as president. All month long he had introduced one irrelevant resolution after another, to give himself fresh springboards for propaganda. Now he introduced two more, one denouncing "the unprovoked, barbaric attacks" of U.S. planes on China, and the other, "monarcho-fascist terrorism in Greece." With savage suavity, Jebb labeled these two items for what they were, Jebb called Malik's charge of U.S. aggression a document "beneath contempt, except for its only obvious use, namely, its distribution as a propaganda leaflet." Of Malik's resolution on Greece, Jebb said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Out of the Stall | 9/11/1950 | See Source »

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