0 present participle of prejudice
1 Someone or something that prejudices you influences you unfairly so that you form an unreasonable opinion about something:
A location south of the existing classrooms provided a good connection to the existing school without prejudicing the existing classrooms.
The law may still be available to address the effects of speech that causes injury by prejudicing third parties.
In both eras, government protection and support may well have encouraged investment with little regard to competitive efficiency and largely neglecting or prejudicing small-scale agriculture.
The need was to eliminate from a given ensemble the traces showing anomalous behaviour without biasing or prejudicing the mean properties of the remaining data.
There are a great many trees in most rural areas which could be utilised without spoiling the amenities or prejudicing the economic growing of timber.
Special steps to ensure that apple-growers obtain all that they require could not be taken without prejudicing supplies for other essential uses.
I have heard them described as archaic and time-wasting, and constituting a risk in prejudicing the accused's case.
We consider that this proposal will ensure the most effective use of resources without prejudicing the rights of detainees.