0 an unfair and unreasonable opinion or feeling, especially when formed without enough thought or knowledge -- 成见,偏见,歧视
My client accepts the formal apology without prejudice to any further legal action she may decide to take. 我的委托人接受了正式道歉,这不会影响她将来可能会采取的法律手段。
He claims that prejudice against homosexuals would cease overnight if all the gay stars in the country were honest about their sexuality. 他称如果国内所有的同性恋明星都能对自己的性取向开诚布公,那么对同性恋者的偏见就会立即消失。
[ + that ] The campaign aims to dispel the prejudice that AIDS is confined to the homosexual community. 这项运动旨在消除艾滋病仅限于同性恋群体的偏见。
Laws against racial prejudice must be strictly enforced. 禁止种族歧视的法律必须严格执行。
1 Someone or something that prejudices you influences you unfairly so that you form an unreasonable opinion about something. -- 使有成见,使有偏见,使产生歧视
In fact, there are a good many reasons to take the embittered reflections and prejudices of contemporaries seriously, and not to brush them aside.
The reliability of records such as electoral registers can also be prejudiced by differential geographical mobility.
The tolerance and freedom from prejudice they vaunted pertained largely to religion, not nationality.
Thus did red tape and prejudice prevent an important feature connected with the genuine character of spiritual agency from being put to the test.
However, despite the personal prejudices of the 'establishment', respect for the creative skill of an author might hold sway.
Relativism counsels tolerance, it is believed, whereas nonrelativism engenders accusations of irrationality or willful malice and a dogmatic attachment to one's own cultural prejudices.
There are simply too many constituencies, too many prejudices and too many conflicting instincts to satisfy.
All stories are artificial constructions, he seeks to remind us, and never convey the facts to the exception of presuppositions, prejudices and blindspots about ourselves.