un-American

Etymology
From.

Adjective

 * 1) Contrary to the principles, institutions or interests of the United States; anti-American.
 * 2)  Incivil, immoral.
 * 3) Unrelated to America or the U.S.; untypical of U.S. mores or habits; non-American, not American.
 * 4) * 2017,, "Rebecca: Welcome to the Haunted House", The Criterion Collection:
 * [About British filmmaker Alfred Hitchcock:] It’s not often addressed in criticism, but Hitchcock was un-American enough to dwell on the uneasiness or the unreliability of heroes.
 * 1)  Incivil, immoral.
 * 2) Unrelated to America or the U.S.; untypical of U.S. mores or habits; non-American, not American.
 * 3) * 2017,, "Rebecca: Welcome to the Haunted House", The Criterion Collection:
 * [About British filmmaker Alfred Hitchcock:] It’s not often addressed in criticism, but Hitchcock was un-American enough to dwell on the uneasiness or the unreliability of heroes.
 * 1) * 2017,, "Rebecca: Welcome to the Haunted House", The Criterion Collection:
 * [About British filmmaker Alfred Hitchcock:] It’s not often addressed in criticism, but Hitchcock was un-American enough to dwell on the uneasiness or the unreliability of heroes.

Usage notes

 * GPO manual recommends using a hyphen when prefixing capitalized words except when usage dictates otherwise.

Translations

 * Danish: uamerikansk
 * Dutch:
 * German: unamerikanisch