red-green

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English

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Etymology

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From red +‎ green.

Adjective

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red-green (comparative more red-green, superlative most red-green)

  1. Pertaining to the shades of red and green, as in red-green colorblindness.
  2. (politics) Synonym of ecosocialist.
  3. (politics) Relating to an alliance between socialists and Islamists.
    • 2016, Mark Silinsky, Jihad and the West: Black Flag over Babylon, →ISBN, page 49:
      Also the “red-green axis”—or, as French Prime Minister Manuel Valls calls it, “Islamo-leftism”—the partnership between Leftists and Islamists, is entrenched on campuses, as evidenced by myriad political resolutions passed by flagship organizations such as the Middle East Studies Association.
    • 2021, Michael S. Cochin, Michel Houellebecq, the Cassandra of Freedom: The Pleasures of Decay in Houllebecq's Submission, →ISBN, page 160:
      The core of the globalist coalition Houllebecq depicts in Submission subsumes the “Red-Green” coalition between the social-democratic left worldwide and the Muslim immigrants they have welcomed, what Houllebecq elsewhere calls “the unholy collusion between the far-left and radical Islam.”
    • 2023, Ronnie Fraser, Lola Fraser, editors, Challenging the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) Movement: 20 Years of Responding to Anti-Israel Campaigns, →ISBN, page unknown:
      The Arab states that signed the Abraham Accords with Israel all have a common interest in containing the influence of the Red-Green Alliance.

Noun

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red-green (plural red-greens)

  1. (politics) Synonym of ecosocialist

Anagrams

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