Skip to main content

racial

/rey-shuhl/US // ˈreɪ ʃəl //UK // (ˈreɪʃəl) //

种族,种族问题,种族划分,种族方面

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : of or relating to the social construct of race: racial diversity;racial stereotypes.
    • : of, relating to, or characteristic of one race or the races of humankind.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • That’s really what’s most necessary as a way forward particularly in the moment of racial justice that we’re in as a country.

  • He might have been better off sticking with the pandemic — cases appear to be flattening out ever so slightly, though thousands of new cases are reported daily — than with the red meat of racial politics.

  • That’s because racism and racial inequity are more than just public policy issues.

  • As societal attention remains fixed on racial justice, decision-makers are “finding they can do much better” in building businesses that reflect the communities they serve, Heidrick and Struggles’ report says.

  • Given this summer’s call for social change, the first episode feels especially timely, as Atticus road-trips from Chicago to Massachusetts with the threat of deadly racial violence lurking at every pit stop.

  • The attempt to “breed back” the Auroch of Teutonic legend was of a piece with the Nazi obsession with racial purity and eugenics.

  • It demands an end to poverty and racial injustice, to which we are totally committed in our time.

  • The state was in a deep recession as Duke galvanized a racial backlash.

  • This was later repurposed in Europe as an explanation for racial superiority, and the term “Aryan” came to define a white race.

  • He first rose to prominence as a lawyer in Queens, who settled a boiling racial dispute over public housing in Forest Hills.

  • Like all racial beauties, bred by selection, she needed the arts of dress and furnishings to frame her.

  • Sin Sin Wa performed a curious shrugging movement, peculiarly racial.

  • Racial segregation in the public schools of Virginia was provided for in the Constitution of 1902.

  • Racial segregation in the public schools of Virginia was constitutionally established in the Underwood Constitution of 1902.

  • It was the clutch of something racial and inherited—a something which the Northerner hardly knows.