manospheric

English

Etymology

From manosphere +‎ -ic.

Adjective

manospheric (comparative more manospheric, superlative most manospheric)

  1. Related to, characteristic of, or belonging to the manosphere.
    • 2017, Zach Bratich, “Reality Wars: Notes on the homicidal states”, in Fifth Estate[1], page 40:
      Despite the laughable attempts at neo-royalism (Exhibit A: the manospheric “Return of Kings”) they are not preservers of a powerful noble culture.
    • 2021, Rachel Guy, “Nation of Men: Diagnosing Manospheric Misogyny as Virulent Online Nationalism”, in The Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law[2], volume XXII, page 609:
      Manospheric misogyny has latched on to this "natural" order and insists on its preservation.
    • 2023, David S. Smith, Alice Butler-Warke, Emma-Lee Davidson, Gemma Stevens, “'The ultimate test of self-discipline': Lockdown and the NoFap community”, in Sexualities, volume 27, number 4, page 942:
      In that respect, NoFap may be part of a pipeline to manospheric beliefs or a group in which many members are fellow travelers.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:manospheric.