lebensraum
see also: Lebensraum
Noun

lebensraum (plural lebensräume)

  1. (chiefly, with reference to nations and peoples) Hitherto unoccupied “living space” claimed as one’s rightful domain.
    • 1949: Annals of the Association of American Geographers, volumes 39–40, page 115 ↗ (self-published)
      Geographers accepted this enlarged meaning of the term and spoke readily of geographical Räume and Lebensräume of peoples, even in cases where no real three-dimensional distribution was implied.
    • 2010 (March 24th, 4:00pm): Ben “Yahtzee” Croshaw ↗, “Battlefield: Bad Company 2 ↗” reviewed by Zero Punctuation ↗, 2:48–3:05
      Even when there aren’t any explosions going on, when you’re scanning a distant compound with your sniper rifle, trying to decide which soldier would be the best one to kill first, before every enemy in a two-mile radius deduces your exact position like a vodka-drinking sextant, everything from a certain distance disappears into this weird glowing haze, like the Russians are occupying the surface of Mercury — which is beyond even the most liberal interpretation of lebensraum.
Translations
  • French: espace vital
  • German: Lebensraum
  • Portuguese: Lebensraum
  • Russian: жи́зненное простра́нство

Lebensraum
Pronunciation
  • (RP) enPR: lāʹbənzroum, IPA: /ˈleːbənsˌɹaʊm/
Proper noun
  1. (in German history from the mid-nineteenth to mid-twentieth Centuries) Territories considered appropriate for German habitation, regarded as vital for the natural flourishing of the German race:
    1. (in early usage) an empire in the form of overseas colonies, in imitation of contemporary powers such as Britain and France.
    2. (in later usage, Nazism) a Großdeutschland obtained through Endoeuropean expansion, usually with a focus upon Drang nach Osten, and varying in its scope from the comparatively modest annexation of the Polish Border Strip to overlordship of the European continent by the conquest of Russian lands as far as the Urals.
Related terms


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