Citations:genticide


 * 1)  The killing of a race or nation of people; the slaughter of an ethnic group; a genocide.
 * 2) * 1820 May 13th, Philotheorus (pseudonym), untitled contribution to The Plough Boy, and Journal of the Board of Agriculture, ed., volume I, № 50, page :
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- O! murder! genticide! (exclaimed Jesse, as his father opened the door upon him) what a world we live in!


 * 1) * 1957, Margaret Willy, Essays and Studies: Being Volume Ten of the New Series of Essays and Studies Collected for the English Association, John Murray, page :
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 * 1) * 1957, Margaret Willy, Essays and Studies: Being Volume Ten of the New Series of Essays and Studies Collected for the English Association, John Murray, page :
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- Genocide was at first called “an odious word”, but UNO have apparently forgiven it for not being genticide, and adopted it.


 * 1) * 1959, A. Bronson Feldman, The Unconscious in History, New York:, page :
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- The term I shall employ is genticide, from the Latin gens meaning blood-relation or kin.


 * 1) * ibidem, page :
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- The place of incest is historically taken by the conquest of nature, the place of genticide by varieties of social violence ranging from crime to war.


 * 1) * ibidem, page :
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- They simply cannot permit the credence that the spinners of these yarns were everywhere and always chiefly concerned with incest and genticide.


 * 1) * ibidem, page :
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- The metamorphosis of actual incest and genticide into astral saga was probably promoted by the savage belief that changes in weather and the aspects of the skies were somehow responses to their outrages of lust.


 * 1) * 1965, Mario Andrew Pei, The Story of Language, /New York: J.B. Lippincott Company (revised edition), page :
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- On a higher plane is the objection to “genocide,” which combines the Greek root for “race” with the Latin root for “kill”; “genticide” has been suggested as a nonhybrid, all-Latin substitute.


 * 1) * 2001 October, Charles Lock, “Fredy Neptune: Metonymy and the Incarnate Preposition” in , volume XX, № 2, page, endnote 5:
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- For the exact reference I am indebted to Klein’s Comprehensive Etymological Dictionary of the English Language, s.v. ‘genocide’. Dr. Ernest Klein lost his entire family in Auschwitz, and sought healing in etymology. Of Lemkin’s coinage Klein notes with surpassing aridity: ‘The correct word would be genticide, in which both elements are of Latin origin.’ One extraordinary lexicographer calls forth another: ‘My great-grandfather’s first cousin, Sir James Murray of the Oxford English Dictionary’ (Les Murray, ‘The Bonnie Disproportion,’ 113).


 * 1) * 2008, Bartolomé Clavero Salvador, Genocide or Ethnocide, 1933–2007: How to make, unmake, and remake law with words (Per la storia del pensiero giuridico moderno, volume LXXXII), : Giuffrè Editore, chapter ii: “Washington, 1944: Two Original Names for One Old Offense, Genocide and Ethnocide”, page, footnote 28:
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 * 1) * 2012, Julius Ruiz, translating Francisco Espinosa in “Old Wine in New Bottles: The Historiography of Repression in Spain During and After the Spanish Civil War” in The Spanish Second Republic Revisited: From Democratic Hopes to the Civil War (1931–1936), eds. Manuel Álvarez Tardío and Fernando del Rey Reguillo, /Portland/: Sussex Academic Press, ISBN 9781845194598, chapter 11, page :
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- As Espinosa puts it, ‘of course there was programmed death, a plan of extermination and political genocide, although some prefer to talk of politicide or genticide’.


 * 1)  The killing of a kinsman or kinswoman; the murder of a blood relative.
 * 2) * 1960, George B. Winzie, “The Psychodynamics of History” in Archives of Criminal Psychodynamics, volume IV, pages :
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- To indicate that the desire to kill pertains to either parent, he coins the term “genticide” from the Latin gens meaning family or race.


 * 1) * 2013, Evelyn B. Kelly, Encyclopedia of Human Genetics and Disease, Santa Barbara//: Greenwood, ISBN 9780313387135 (hardback), ISBN 9780313387142 (ebook), volume I: A–K, “Hereditary Hearing Disorders and Deafness: A Special Topic”, page :
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- Hearing loss occurs as additional symptoms in a number of conditions caused by mutations in mitochondrial DNA. For example, mutations in the mitochondrial gene 125 RNA gene increases risk for hearing loss if the person takes certain antibiotic drugs, such as genticide.