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1 discriminate
[dɪs'krɪmɪneɪt]vito discriminate between sth and sth — odróżniać (odróżnić perf) coś od czegoś
* * *[di'skrimineit]1) ((with between) to make or see a difference between: It is difficult to discriminate between real and pretended cases of poverty.) rozróżniać2) ((often with against) to treat a certain kind of people differently: He was accused of discriminating against women employees.) dyskryminować•
См. также в других словарях:
discriminate — di‧scrim‧i‧nate [dɪˈskrɪmneɪt] verb [intransitive] HUMAN RESOURCES LAW to behave unfairly towards one group of people or one type of company or product: discriminate against • employment practices that discriminate against women • The court… … Financial and business terms
discriminate — verb 1 (I, T) to recognize a difference between things (+ between): It s sometimes difficult to discriminate between edible and poisonous mushrooms. | discriminate sth from: You must learn to discriminate fact from opinion. 2 (I) to treat people… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
discriminate — di|scrim|i|nate [dıˈskrımıneıt] v [Date: 1600 1700; : Latin; Origin: discriminare to divide , from discernere; DISCERN] 1.) [I] to treat a person or group differently from another in an unfair way discriminate against ▪ Under federal law, it is… … Dictionary of contemporary English
differentiate — dif|fe|ren|ti|ate [ˌdıfəˈrenʃieıt] v 1.) [I and T] to recognize or express the difference between things or people = ↑distinguish differentiate between ▪ It s important to differentiate between fact and opinion. differentiate sth from sth ▪ It s… … Dictionary of contemporary English
differentiate — verb 1 (I, T) to recognize or express the difference between things or people (+ between): The reviews don t even differentiate between good books and bad books. | differentiate sb/sth from: It s sometimes hard to differentiate one sample from… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English