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ressentiment

[ French ruh-sahn-tee-mahn ]

noun

  1. any cautious, defeatist, or cynical attitude based on the belief that the individual and human institutions exist in a hostile or indifferent universe or society.
  2. an oppressive awareness of the futility of trying to improve one's status in life or in society.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of ressentiment1

From French, dating back to 1940–45; resentment
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

His mixture of insult, ressentiment, and buffoonery is a work of genius.

From

Television and music, monuments and memorials have all been prime levers of a political project, a campaign of cultural ressentiment and national rebirth, that culminated this May on the blue-green carpets beneath Hagia Sophia’s dome.

From

"Redistribution" is a bad word, reeking of ressentiment, only to be applied to measures that would benefit the lower three-quarters of the population.

From

In life if not in his philosophy, the ressentiment of those nursing a grievance is often directed downward, from those who have little to those who have less.

From

By stoking ressentiment and algorithmically-driven marketing that pressures deliberating citizens to become impulse-buying consumers, Trump ushered millions into a political twilight zone where democracy is suspended by strongmen.

From

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