different between jihadise vs jihadist

jihadise

English

Etymology

jihad +? -ise

Verb

jihadise (third-person singular simple present jihadises, present participle jihadising, simple past and past participle jihadised)

  1. To increase the jihadistic nature of
    • 2008 Eric Germain, Islam in Inter-War Europe - Page 286
      It was to politicise, jihadise and globalise Islam as an ...
    • 2008, India Today International - Issue 27 - Page 32
      Despite being regarded as outsiders, these Wahhabi radicals helped in jihadising the tribes in the frontier region. What is much less well documented is the role played by Shah Abdul Ghani's Madrasa-i-Ramiyya mullahs and students in 1857.
    • 2013 Jules Stewart, The Savage Border: The Story of the North-West Frontier
      in part because he and his remaining “Arabs” and Taliban allies have been offered sanctuary, but also because of the active connivance of the jihadised ...

jihadise From the web:



jihadist

English

Etymology

jihad +? -ist. Attested from the 1910s in the sense of "a mujahid".[1]The adjectival sense of "pertaining to the jihadist movement" is from the 1960s.[2][3][4].

Noun

jihadist (plural jihadists)

  1. One who participates in a jihad; a mujahid.

Synonyms

  • mujahid, jihadi, takfiri

Translations

Adjective

jihadist (comparative more jihadist, superlative most jihadist)

  1. Pertaining to the Islamic fundamentalist doctrine of jihadism.

Translations

Anagrams

  • ijtihads

jihadist From the web:

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