fever-swamp

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

fever-swamp (plural fever-swamps)

  1. Alternative form of fever swamp
    1. Disease-ridden swamp.
      • 1974, Lin Carter, The valley where time stood still, page 31:
        Think of it as the Martian equivalent of the Fountain of Youth, which that grizzled and gullible old soldier-of-fortune, Ponce de Leon, once searched for in the fever-swamps of Florida, and you will not be far off the mark.
      • 2006, Hugh Cook, The Worshippers and the Way, →ISBN, page 260:
        It was so hot in this fever-swamp that his water requirements would be prodigious.
      • 2007, Matilda Houstoun, Hesperos - Volume 2, →ISBN, page 42:
        And now we were fairly on the bosom of the 'mighty' Mississippi, that largest, and ugliest, and most tremendous of rivers ; tremendous through the force of its resistless currents, and the fever-swamps that spread their noxious vapours over its surface.
    2. Group of political extremists.
      • 2017 February 21, Heather Yakin, “Our Muslim neighbors are being targeted with violent threats”, in Times Herald-Record:
        The community has been the focus of the fever-swamp for years, with pundits insisting it's a terrorist training camp.
    3. Extreme political positions.
      • 2014, John Avlon, Wingnuts: Extremism in the Age of Obama, →ISBN, page 252:
        Among those caught up in the fever-swamp was Karl Rove, the architect of George W. Bush's two White House wins.

Usage notes[edit]

In most cases, the political uses of this term do not make use of the hyphenated form except for attributive uses such as "fever-swamp conspiracy theories".