Advertisement
Advertisement
new world order
[ noo wurld awr-der, nyoo ]
noun
- a profound change in the organization of social systems or global political power, such as the improved cooperation between formerly hostile countries after the end of the Cold War.
- New World Or·der,
- a hypothetical, secretly developing, global reorganization of social, political, and economic systems in the direction of totalitarianism, as posited by a conspiracy theory.
- the conspiracy theory that posits this reorganization.
Word History and Origins
Origin of new world order1
Example Sentences
Second, that requirement to act has become politically attractive because it fits into Sir Keir Starmer's more and more familiar script, that the new world order has changed – governments need to be more active and agile in protecting their own interests.
But it puts the government on a path to make real some of its rhetoric in recent weeks, as one figure put it – "neoliberalism is over. Ownership matters again - Labour needs to define Britain's place in this new, new world order".
The new world order that Trump and his Elon-flavored pals hope to create by blowing things up will not come into being; that doesn’t mean the old one was working.
I ask Mr Patrushev: "Do you have a sense that a new world order is being forged?"
And he is doing this in such a way that, to many, the old world order appears to be over - and the new world order has yet to take shape.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse