autodestructive
English
editEtymology
editFrom auto- + destructive.
Adjective
editautodestructive (comparative more autodestructive, superlative most autodestructive)
- Self-destroying; self-destructive.
- 1993, Jonathan Law, European culture: a contemporary companion, page 247:
- […] until 1957 he was a painter. However, as he told Bomberg, he was searching for something 'extremely fast and intense' and in 1960 he began 'painting' with acid on nylon, thus becoming a pioneer of autodestructive art, for which he has remained the chief spokesman.
- 1996 June 28, Jonathan Rosenbaum, “Acid Western”, in Chicago Reader[1]:
- Collectively they conjure up a crazed version of autodestructive white America at its most solipsistic, hankering after its own lost origins.
- 2000 June 16, Per-Arne Oldenborg et al., “Role of CD47 as a Marker of Self on Red Blood Cells”, in Science[2], volume 288, number 5473, , pages 2051–2054:
- In contrast to what might be expected, MHC class I-deficient mice are not autodestructive.