fifth column
noun
OTHER WORDS FROM fifth column
fifth columnist, nounWords nearby fifth column
Example sentences from the Web for fifth column
He branded it a fifth-column invasion into popular culture, normalizing radical, even communist ambitions.
British Dictionary definitions for fifth column
noun
Derived forms of fifth column
fifth columnist, nounCultural definitions for fifth column
People willing to cooperate with an aggressor against their own country. The term originated in a remark by Francisco Franco, the Spanish dictator, that he was marching on Madrid with four columns of troops, and that there was a “fifth column” of sympathizers within the city ready to help.
Idioms and Phrases with fifth column
A secret subversive group that works against a country or organization from the inside, as in The government feared that there was a fifth column working to oppose its policies during the crisis. This term was invented by General Emilio Mola during the Spanish Civil War in a radio broadcast on October 16, 1936, in which he said that he had una quinta columna (“a fifth column”) of sympathizers for General Franco among the Republicans holding the city of Madrid, and it would join his four columns of troops when they attacked. The term was popularized by Ernest Hemingway and later extended to any traitorous insiders.