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1 prejudice
1. noun1) (bias) Vorurteil, das2. transitive verbwithout prejudice — (Law) unbeschadet aller Rechte
1) (bias) beeinflussenprejudice somebody in somebody's favour/against somebody — jemanden für/gegen jemanden einnehmen
2) (injure) beeinträchtigen* * *['pre‹ədis] 1. noun((an) opinion or feeling for or especially against something, formed unfairly or unreasonably ie without proper knowledge: The jury must listen to his statement without prejudice; Is racial prejudice (= dislike of people because of their race) increasing in this country?) das Vorurteil2. verb1) (to cause to feel prejudice for or against something.) einnehmen2) (to harm or endanger (a person's position, prospects etc) in some way: Your terrible handwriting will prejudice your chances of passing the exam.) beeinträchtigen•- academic.ru/57527/prejudiced">prejudiced* * *preju·dice[ˈpreʤədɪs]I. nracial \prejudice Rassenvorurteil nt\prejudice against homosexuals/women Vorurteil nt gegen Homosexuelle/Frauenwithout \prejudice ohne Schaden für die eigenen Rechte, freibleibend, ohne Verbindlichkeitwithout \prejudice to sth unbeschadet einer S. genII. vt1. (harm)▪ to \prejudice sb/sth jdn/etw schädigento \prejudice sb's chances jds Chancen beeinträchtigen2. (bias)to \prejudice a case LAW den Ausgang eines Prozesses beeinflussento \prejudice a witness LAW einen Zeugen/eine Zeugin beeinflussen* * *['predZʊdɪs]1. n1) (= biased opinion) Vorurteil nthis prejudice against... — seine Voreingenommenheit gegen...
that's pure prejudice —
the newspaper report was full of prejudice against... — der Zeitungsbericht steckte voller Vorurteile gegen...
to have a prejudice against sb/sth — ein Vorurteil nt gegen jdn/etw haben, gegen jdn/etw voreingenommen sein
colour prejudice — Vorurteile pl gegen Andersfarbige or aufgrund or auf Grund der Hautfarbe
2. vt1) (= bias) einnehmen, beeinflussen → also prejudicedSee:→ also prejudiced2) (= injure) gefährden; chances beeinträchtigen, gefährden* * *prejudice [ˈpredʒʊdıs; -dʒə-]A s1. Vorurteil n, Voreingenommenheit f, vorgefasste Meinung, JUR Befangenheit f:have a prejudice against Vorurteile haben gegenwork to the prejudice of sich nachteilig auswirken für;without prejudice ohne Schaden für die eigenen Rechte oder Ansprüche;without prejudice to ohne Schaden für, unbeschadet (gen);be without prejudice to sth etwas unberührt lassenB v/t1. jemanden mit einem Vorurteil erfüllen, (günstig oder ungünstig) beeinflussen, jemanden einnehmen (in favo[u]r of für; against gegen)2. auch JUR beeinträchtigen, benachteiligen, jemandem oder einer Sache schaden, einer Sache Abbruch tun* * *1. noun1) (bias) Vorurteil, das2. transitive verbwithout prejudice — (Law) unbeschadet aller Rechte
1) (bias) beeinflussenprejudice somebody in somebody's favour/against somebody — jemanden für/gegen jemanden einnehmen
2) (injure) beeinträchtigen* * *n.Schaden -¨e m.Voreingenommenheit f.Vorurteil n. -
2 overcome
См. также в других словарях:
prejudice — I UK [ˈpredʒʊdɪs] / US [ˈpredʒədɪs] noun [countable/uncountable] Word forms prejudice : singular prejudice plural prejudices ** an unreasonable opinion or feeling, especially the feeling of not liking a particular group of people the evils of… … English dictionary
prejudice — prej|u|dice1 [ predʒədıs ] noun count or uncount ** an unreasonable opinion or feeling, especially the feeling of not liking a particular group of people: Jackson apologized, saying the song was supposed to illustrate the evils of prejudice.… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
prejudice — [ˈpredʒʊdɪs] noun [C/U] I an unreasonable opinion or feeling, especially the feeling of not liking a particular group of people We ve been working hard to overcome prejudice against women in politics.[/ex] II verb [T] prejudice [ˈpredʒʊdɪs] to… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
prejudice — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ deep, deep rooted, deep seated, strong ▪ blatant ▪ serious (esp. BrE), unfair (esp. BrE) … Collocations dictionary
prejudice — prej|u|dice1 [ˈpredʒudıs] n [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: Latin praejudicium, from judicium judgment ] 1.) [U and C] an unreasonable dislike and distrust of people who are different from you in some way, especially because of their race … Dictionary of contemporary English
prejudice — 01. There is a lot of [prejudice] against women in the workplace, which can keep them from rising to high positions in some companies. 02. The defendant s lawyer was afraid that widespread newspaper coverage of the murder would be [prejudicial]… … Grammatical examples in English
overcome — verb 1 defeat/conquer sb/sth ADVERB ▪ completely ▪ successfully ▪ not entirely ▪ These problems were never entirely overcome. ▪ largely … Collocations dictionary
overcome */*/ — UK [ˌəʊvə(r)ˈkʌm] / US [ˌoʊvərˈkʌm] verb [transitive] Word forms overcome : present tense I/you/we/they overcome he/she/it overcomes present participle overcoming past tense overcame UK [ˌəʊvə(r)ˈkeɪm] / US [ˌoʊvərˈkeɪm] past participle overcome… … English dictionary
We Shall Overcome — [We Shall Overcome] a song used during the ↑civil rights movement by ↑African Americans and their supporters to show that they intended to overcome prejudice and ↑segregation. Mahalia ↑Jackson often sang it at their meetings. It was originally a… … Useful english dictionary
We Shall Overcome — a song used during the civil rights movement by African Americans and their supporters to show that they intended to overcome prejudice and segregation. Mahalia Jackson often sang it at their meetings. It was originally a gospel song, and… … Universalium
literature — /lit euhr euh cheuhr, choor , li treuh /, n. 1. writings in which expression and form, in connection with ideas of permanent and universal interest, are characteristic or essential features, as poetry, novels, history, biography, and essays. 2.… … Universalium