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Wiktionary英語版での「blackpill」の意味 |
blackpill
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/06/28 21:30 UTC 版)
名詞
blackpill (plural blackpills)
- Alternative spelling of black pill.
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2023 January, Meg Roser, Charlotte Chalker and Tim Squirrell, “Spitting out the blackpill: Evaluating how incels present themselves in their own words on the incel Wiki”, in Institute for Strategic Dialogue, page 5:
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Those who believe in the blackpill tend to adopt violently misogynistic beliefs about the nature of women, particularly with regard to their sexual behaviour.
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動詞
blackpill (third-person singular simple present blackpills, present participle blackpilling, simple past and past participle blackpilled)
- Alternative spelling of black pill (“to adopt a nihilistic far-right philosophy”).
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2019 November, Sylvia Jaki et al., “Online Hatred of Women in the Incels.me Forum: Linguistic Analysis and Automatic Detection”, in Journal of Language Aggression and Conflict, volume 7, number 2, :
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While some would derive satisfaction from systematically blackpilling the world, i.e., spreading their negative world view, others actively incite violence towards women, or even call for human extinction in general.
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2021, Hugo Engholm, The lack of looks, Uppsala University:
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One user argues for why someone could be both blackpilled and socialists with the argument “Maybe because of NEETbux? [Unemployment payments] Or the principle of redistributing resources to those who have least, pussy being just another resource?”
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black pill
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/12/07 03:38 UTC 版)
別の表記
- black-pill, blackpill
語源
Nihilism sense influenced by preexisting red pill. See there for further explanation.
発音
名詞
black pill (plural black pills)
- (slang) An opium pill.
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2004, Peggy Rankine, Busha Benjie:
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Each person requested one of the following - black pill, calomel and soda, puick, jallop and antimony wine. Those were the names the people knew for drugs in those days.
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- A poison pill; a pill intended to kill the person who ingests it.
- (philosophy) A hypothetical pill with a specific probability of causing death, which one is offered a large sum of money in order to take, as a philosophical dilemma.
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1980, C. West Churchman, “Symposium Summary the Safety Profession's Image of Humanity”, in Societal Risk Assessment,, →ISBN:
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But to me both characters in the black pill example were immoral in Kant's sense: the person who made the offer and the person who accepted it (to accept the offer of deliberately running a risk of death for dollars gain is treating humanity in yourself as a means only, whether or not you agree, or perhaps especially if you agree)
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- A traditional Tibetan remedy.
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1995, James J Hughes, Damien Keown, “Buddhism and Medical Ethics: A Bibliographic Introduction”, in Journal of Buddhist ethics, volume 2:
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2001, Jürgen C. Aschoff, Tashi Yangphel Tashigang, Tibetan "precious Pills", the Rinchen Medicine:
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This great precious Cold Compound Black Pill contains more than one hundred ingredients, including the metals, gold, silver, copper, and iron, the precious stones sapphire, emerald, turquiose, ruby, and all in detoxified from and a great number of herbal ingredient, including Crocus sativus L. Silkious concretion of bamboo.
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2003, Michele Martin, Music in the Sky: The Life, Art, and Teachings of the 17th Karmapa Ogyen109, →ISBN:
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It is said that taking a black pill will spare one the suffering of the lower realms. The black pills are made of special substances that come from previous incarnations of the Karmapas, as well as other precious, sometimes legendary substances, such as water that has turned into snow lion milk in the skull cup of the protectress Tseringma.
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- (often attributive) A notional pill taken by those who have adopted a nihilistic, usually (but not necessarily) far-right philosophy, especially incels who believe unattractive men will never be sexually or romantically successful, or those who are pessimistic about social or political issues.
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2018, Jacob Davey, Erin Marie Saltman, Jonathan Birdwell, “The mainstreaming of far-right extremism online and how to counter it: a case study on UK, US and French election”, in Trumping the Mainstream, Routledge, →ISBN, unnumbered page:
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Once an individual had accessed this page they would be directed to a number of stories that described other candidates, in this case Fillon and Macron, as crooked, and also described French democracy as a broken system (the 'black pill' content).
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2024 December 12, Rebecca Jennings, “Luigi Mangione and the blackpilling of America”, in Vox, archived from the original on 20 December 2024:
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The problem isn’t just health care or young men: All swaths of Americans increasingly appear to find themselves in a nihilistic mood. More of us, in other words, seem to have taken the black pill. Though the idea comes from the proudly misogynistic manosphere, “black pill” is now used more commonly to illustrate the general disillusionment and nihilism that many Americans share.
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- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:black pill.
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- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see black, pill.
等位語
派生語
動詞
black pill (third-person singular simple present black pills, present participle black pilling, simple past and past participle black pilled)
- (transitive) To cause another to adopt a nihilistic philosophy.
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2019, Emile Frankel, Hearing the Cloud: Can Music Help Reimagine The Future?, unnumbered page:
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And finally, to be 'black-pilled' is to take pleasure in the end of existence, to philosophise from a perspective of our technological demise, and to embrace the singular bleakness of a meaningless world.
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2019, Alexandra Minna Stern, Proud Boys and the White Ethnostate: How the Alt-Right Is Warping the American Imagination, page 97:
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Yet some of the most high-profile men in the alt-right are dismayed by the manosphere's hostility, worried that it has become rife with young men who have been black pilled, turned into angry nihilists who might become homicidal or suicidal incels.
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- 2020, anonymous, quoted in Angus Charles Lindsay, "Swallowing the Black Pill: A Qualitative Exploration of Incel Antifeminism within Digital Society", thesis submitted to Victoria University of Wellington, page 73:
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:black pill.
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派生語
- black-pilled (used interchangeably with blackpilled)
black-pill
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Text is available under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC-BY-SA) and/or GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL). Weblio英和・和英辞典に掲載されている「Wiktionary英語版」の記事は、Wiktionaryのblackpill (改訂履歴)、black pill (改訂履歴)、black-pill (改訂履歴)の記事を複製、再配布したものにあたり、Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC-BY-SA)もしくはGNU Free Documentation Licenseというライセンスの下で提供されています。 |
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Text is available under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC-BY-SA) and/or GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL). Weblio英和・和英辞典に掲載されている「Wikipedia英語版」の記事は、WikipediaのBlackpill (改訂履歴)の記事を複製、再配布したものにあたり、Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC-BY-SA)もしくはGNU Free Documentation Licenseというライセンスの下で提供されています。 |
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