disoperative

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

dis- +‎ operative, by analogy to cooperative

Adjective[edit]

disoperative (comparative more disoperative, superlative most disoperative)

  1. Hostile and antagonistic toward any form of cooperation or social cohesion; characterized by disoperation.
    • 1935, Carl Murchison, Warder Clyde Allee, A Handbook of Social Psychology:
      The building-up of a particular community is primarily a matter of cooperation in effecting favorable reactions, but after a longer or shorter period of occupation the reactions become disoperative, and the community is gradually displaced through the competition of one better adapted to the changing habitat.
    • 1980, Adam Apple, A Megasynthesis, page 332:
      Along the continuum of behavior from total disoperation to total cooperation, we must make another quantum leap since our established modes and mad emphasis on competition has become disoperative.
    • 2014, David L. Clarke, Analytical Archaeology, page 359:
      Nevertheless, in time the pastoral nomad system will expand at the expense of the resources of the hunter-fisher-gatherers who may be reduced to a parasitic, then a competitive and eventually to a disoperative interchange.
    • 2016, Wolfgang F. E. Preiser, Environmental Design Perspectives, page 109:
      The disoperative animal had been conditioned to drink only when alone. Therefore, when the cooperative animals attempted to accompany him to the water, the disoperative rat attacked his helpful companion as a function of a different set of values, a disconcertingly human descriptor used by Calhoun.