tokenistic
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]tokenistic (comparative more tokenistic, superlative most tokenistic)
- Serving as a token of support, compliance, etc., but lacking substance; exhibiting or relating to tokenism. [since circa 1960]
- The government has taken nothing more than tokenistic actions on behalf of people with disabilities.
- The company’s use of ads depicting gay couples appears to be merely tokenistic, particularly in view of the support it has given to anti-LGBT politicians.
- 2014 April 14, Lola Okolosie, “We need a women's minister with clout, not another tokenistic exercise”, in The Guardian[1]:
- But what is not needed is a tokenistic gesture to place a woman, any woman, in the role, irrespective of her politics.
- 2017, Jamie Bartlett, chapter 6, in Radicals, William Heinemann, →ISBN:
- ‘You can't say “coloured”. And it's not the word “black” either,’ says Sarah's partner, Ross. ‘It's that it's tokenistic to say “invite your black friends”.’
- 2020 July 6, David Batty, “Universities criticised for ‘tokenistic’ support for Black Lives Matter”, in The Guardian[2]:
- More than 300 academics and students have criticised universities for their “tokenistic and superficial” support for the Black Lives Matter movement given their poor record on tackling institutional racism.
- 2021 January 27, Stefanie Foster, quoting Jonathan Bartley, “Comment: Rail crucial to green success”, in RAIL, issue 923, page 3:
- As Jonathan Bartley said in The Independent on January 20, it makes Johnson's £12bn ten-point plan look "tokenistic by comparison".
- (obsolete) Constituting a token or symbol.
- Synonym: symbolic
- 1908, T. W. Pearce, “The Ancient Faiths of the Chinese” in Arnold Wright (ed.), Twentieth Century Impressions of Hongkong, Shanghai, and other Treaty Ports of China, London: Lloyd’s Greater Britain Publishing Company, p. 340,[3]
- Animals are tokens. Among tokenistic animals the dragon holds the first place. The dragon of the sky is indissolubly linked in the minds of the masses with the emperor who sits on the dragon throne, and who, after death, ascends upon the dragon “to be a guest on high.”