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Prejudiced   /prˈɛdʒədəst/   Listen
Prejudiced

adjective
1.
Emanating from a person's emotions and prejudices.
2.
Being biased or having a belief or attitude formed beforehand.  Synonym: discriminatory.  Antonym: unprejudiced.



Prejudice

verb
(past & past part. prejudiced; pres. part. prejudicing)
1.
Disadvantage by prejudice.
2.
Influence (somebody's) opinion in advance.  Synonym: prepossess.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Prejudiced" Quotes from Famous Books



... the Atlantic, De Foe has transferred it from a quiet and sequestered to a populous and troubled sea,—the Fleet Street or Cheapside of the navigating world, the great throughfare of nations,—and thus has prejudiced the moral sense and the fancy against his fiction still more inevitably than his judgment, and in a way that was perfectly needless; for the change brought along with ...
— Autobiographic Sketches • Thomas de Quincey

... ignored, or the meaning of words is changed according to the requirements of the reasoning. Nor is it only the philosophical quack who employs these conjuring tricks to deceive the public; without being conscious of it, the most upright and the least prejudiced thinker uses analogous means to satisfy his thirst for knowledge directly that he issues from the only sphere where reason can legitimately enjoy the fruit of ...
— The Works of Frederich Schiller in English • Frederich Schiller

... perfectly, in a perfect environment, would probably have no faults. Even such a child, however, would be at times inconvenient, and would do and say things at variance with the order of the adult world. Therefore he might seem to a hasty, prejudiced observer to be naughty. And, indeed, imperfectly born, imperfectly trained as children now are, many of their so-called faults are no more than such inconvenient crossings of an immature ...
— Study of Child Life • Marion Foster Washburne

... me the history of the period covered by my life since 1829 is particularly interesting. I do not think that I am prejudiced when I assert that while this period has not been great in Art and Letters, from a material, scientific, and industrial standpoint it has been the most wonderful epoch in all the ...
— Fifty Years of Public Service • Shelby M. Cullom

... excess of vehemence in accusation for a moment almost discredits him. The King demands to see the accused. The trial shall proceed at once. He apprehends difficulty in the case: a charge so black against one so young and a woman, made by a man so impassioned and almost of necessity prejudiced, yet of long confirmed reputation for stern integrity of honour as for bravery. "God give me ...
— The Wagnerian Romances • Gertrude Hall


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