prejudice 的 2 个定义
- an unfavorable opinion or feeling formed beforehand or without knowledge, thought, or reason.
- any preconceived opinion or feeling, either favorable or unfavorable.
- unreasonable feelings, opinions, or attitudes, especially of a hostile nature, regarding an ethnic, racial, social, or religious group.
- (5)
prej·u·diced, prej·u·dic·ing.
- to affect with a prejudice, either favorable or unfavorable: His honesty and sincerity prejudiced us in his favor.
prejudice 近义词
belief without basis, information; intolerance
prejudice 的近义词 43 个
- animosity
- bias
- bigotry
- chauvinism
- discrimination
- enmity
- injustice
- preconception
- racism
- sexism
- xenophobia
- ageism
- antipathy
- apartheid
- aversion
- contemptuousness
- detriment
- disgust
- dislike
- displeasure
- illiberality
- mindset
- narrow-mindedness
- partiality
- pique
- prejudgment
- prepossession
- repugnance
- revulsion
- slant
- spleen
- tilt
- twist
- umbrage
- unfairness
- warp
- bad opinion
- disrelish
- foregone conclusion
- jaundiced eye
- misjudgment
- one-sidedness
- preconceived notion
prejudice 的反义词 18 个
influence another's beliefs without basis, information
更多prejudice例句
- They are flesh-and-blood evidence of the ways in which our prejudices and stereotypes hinder the economic stability of the hardest workers and professional advancement of some of this country’s most talented residents.
- The duke, the lady and the baby-face queen — these characters’ struggles are not framed by slavery or prejudice.
- As Hinds and other critics pointed out, the show also explicitly references slavery — so the “fantasy” of this 1813 is still anchored in the reality of systemic prejudice.
- For once, death, and the death in life of prejudice, could claim nothing but the skeleton of an old man.
- Quantum mechanics needs no particular interpretation if it is formulated without the preexisting prejudice that nature should exhibit cause-and-effect determinism.
- I do, however, intend it to sound mean about the reactionary, prejudice-infested place she comes from.
- A few days ago, he criticized his home state of Alabama for its entrenched prejudice.
- But the exemption was also born of prejudice and discrimination.
- So specious, in fact, that they are increasingly seen to be rationales to cover outdated forms of prejudice.
- If The Biggest Loser could correct this misconception, it would do a lot to reduce anti-obesity prejudice.
- Finally, let me ask the general reader to put aside all prejudice, and give both sides a fair hearing.
- Thou fell spirit of pride, prejudice, ignorance, and mauvaise honte!
- It is beyond the comprehension of any man not blinded by superstition, not warped by prejudice and old-time convention.
- The last vestige of her prejudice against Indians had melted and gone, in the presence of their simple-hearted friendliness.
- With Monsieur de Lussigny,” he interposed, “it is a matter of prejudice, not of principle.