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Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
anti-war

also antiwar, 1857, from anti- + war (n.).

Wiktionary
anti-war

a. opposed to war, or to a specific war alt. opposed to war, or to a specific war

Usage examples of "anti-war".

The Constitutionalists and anti-war activists also had the support of Senators Hank Brown and Bob Dole.

Within three months, the anti-war movement would produce 100,000 protesters at the Lincoln Memorial.

Though Johnson was a write-in candidate who never came to New Hampshire to campaign, it was a big psychological victory for McCarthy and the anti-war movement.

Sam Brown, one of the most prominent leaders of the student anti-war movement, later got involved in Colorado politics and, when I was President, served the United States with the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.

The has-beens and wanna-bes seemed to have signed on to the anti-war lists on the off chance that their faces might appear in some B-roll on CNN so they could get their AFTRA benefits extended another six months.

Being anti-war in Hollywood was an act of bravery on the order of the keynote speaker at a PLO awards dinner making jokes about Ariel Sharon.

Until now, the war in Vietnam has been a sort of umbrella-issue, providing a semblance of unity to a mixed bag of anti-war groups with little else in common.

Being a part of the anti-war crowd allowed the most overpampered elites since the czar's court to feel relevant again.