racial / ˈreɪ ʃəl /

⭐基础词汇种族种族问题种族划分种族方面

racial 的定义

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

racial 近义词

adj. 形容词 adjective

ethnic

更多racial例句

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. That’s because racism and racial inequity are more than just public policy issues.
  4. 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.
  5. 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.
  6. The attempt to “breed back” the Auroch of Teutonic legend was of a piece with the Nazi obsession with racial purity and eugenics.
  7. It demands an end to poverty and racial injustice, to which we are totally committed in our time.
  8. The state was in a deep recession as Duke galvanized a racial backlash.
  9. This was later repurposed in Europe as an explanation for racial superiority, and the term “Aryan” came to define a white race.
  10. He first rose to prominence as a lawyer in Queens, who settled a boiling racial dispute over public housing in Forest Hills.
  11. Like all racial beauties, bred by selection, she needed the arts of dress and furnishings to frame her.
  12. Sin Sin Wa performed a curious shrugging movement, peculiarly racial.
  13. Racial segregation in the public schools of Virginia was provided for in the Constitution of 1902.
  14. Racial segregation in the public schools of Virginia was constitutionally established in the Underwood Constitution of 1902.
  15. It was the clutch of something racial and inherited—a something which the Northerner hardly knows.