0 a rule or standard of good behaviour that, unfairly, some people are expected to follow or achieve but other people are not:
1 the habit of treating one group differently than another when both groups should be treated the same
In addition, to restrict culture only to adaptive phenomenon in animals would result in a double standard regarding human culture, much of which is nonadaptive.
The widespread association of this disease with a dissolute life-style also explains a curious double standard regarding consumptive women.
Since very few middle- or upper-class women would have property in the form of earnings the double standard between rich and poor could be maintained.
But the intellectuals' preoccupation with linguistic analysis and cultural theory serves only to encourage the double standard of racial justice.
This double standard began to fray a bit by 1886 and after, as adultery of either parent came under scrutiny by the courts.
Perhaps more unsettling than the double standard in prosecuting the robed brood was the one that existed in actual law enforcement.
I considered that, given the commercialization of drug research and socioeconomic problems, a double standard might be very dangerous.
One fact that became clear from the interviews conducted during the survey was that the double standard was still very much in operation.
中文繁体
雙重標準…
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双重标准…
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doble moral [feminine], doble estándar [masculine]…
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podwójny standard, niekonsekwentne zasady, niejednakowa miara…
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çifte standart/uygulama/muamele/işlem…
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deux poids [masculine, plural, feminine…
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dobbeltstandard [masculine], to forskjellige standarder [masculine, plural]…
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двойной стандарт…
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