collectivistic
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From collectivist + -ic.
Adjective
[edit]collectivistic (comparative more collectivistic, superlative most collectivistic)
- Of or pertaining to collectivism.
- 1890, Political Science Quarterly, volume 5, number 1, page 167:
- Public contributions, i.e. taxes, are only one form of value — collectivistic value.
- 1895, The Citizen, page 398:
- It is, then, as a treatise of social forces, individualistic and collectivistic, in German literature that Francke's work must be tested, not as a history of the artistic form and content of that literature.
- 2001, David Matsumoto, The Handbook of Culture and Psychology, page 395:
- People in individualistic cultures may be more concerned with distributive justice than people in collectivistic cultures because they have such clear-cut notions of individual equity.