prejudiced
IPA: prˈɛdʒʌdʌst
adjective
- Having prejudices.
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Examples of "prejudiced" in Sentences
- He is prejudiced in the matter.
- But this is prejudiced the jury.
- The article is prejudiced throughout.
- The opening section is also prejudiced
- The use of language is biased and prejudiced.
- Those are the product of your prejudiced mind.
- It seems the editors of this article are prejudiced.
- Many of the townspeople were prejudiced against Anton.
- Whoever removed the edits is prejudiced and unqualified.
- The general meaning should not be prejudiced at the outset.
- What does shock me is when a certain prejudiced view becomes mainstream.
- Whether “most” or “many” Americans are thus prejudiced is an open question, and to that extent, I happily concede that I may be inerror.
- Knowing that Kerouac wrote On the Road in a three-week frenzy of benzedrine and who knows what else, I admit I was prejudiced from the get-go.
- Brownback says a supporter of rival Republican candidate Mike Huckabee waged what he calls a prejudiced anti-Catholic e-mail campaign against him.
- Lindy Chamberlain set to break silence on Azaria case in church LINDY Chamberlain will speak out in an exclusive interview about the death of her daughter Azaria, what she calls a prejudiced police investigation, accusations of murder and a marriage breakdown.