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单词 racist
释义

Definition of racist in English:

racist

noun ˈreɪsɪstˈreɪsəst
  • A person who shows or feels discrimination or prejudice against people of other races, or who believes that a particular race is superior to another.

    I had a fear of being called a racist
    Example sentencesExamples
    • "You may not be a racist but the people who vote for you are," I said to him.
    • With criminals, terrorists, racists etc etc using the Internet to bypass the police, the police will be increasingly frustrated in its attempts to bring them to justice.
    • Cinema itself was a popular entertainment by 1904, the year of the novel's setting, and its traces can also be found, not just in the formal experiments of the novel, but in scenes such as the chasing of advertising canvasser Leopold Bloom by a one-eyed racist and a "mangy mongrel."
    • Breton, Surrealism's leader and a past master of character assassination, claimed in the final issue of Minotaure that Dali was a self-confessed racist, and Dali chose not to respond.
    • She offers words of comfort, but only brash American Dan (Bonar Colleano) actually challenges the racist.
    • It is time for strong action to be taken to show the racists that their chanting and form of supporting is not welcome.
    • Moreover, racists do not need any assistance or prompting in pursuing their malevolent agenda.
    • Racism is an indelible part of Travis's makeup, but it is important to acknowledge that this is a film about a racist rather than a racist film.
    • Baker elicits a stirring performance from Brenda De Banzie as Nell, whose transformation from typical housewife and mother to snarling racist is the centrepiece of the drama.
    • The basic charge is that these men, critics of capitalism, were racists, anti-Semites, and elitists.
    • They're racists because they are driven by hate, and whatever they do, that viciousness just bubbles over.
    • I'm not saying that he is a racist, as I know he was only joking, but it's fascinating to me how many people around us, who say they aren't racist, are against interracial relationships.
    • He railed against being called a racist, a charge leveled at him off and on throughout his career.
    • The chef is a foul-mouthed racist.
    • Of these people, misguided as they may be, few are actual racists.
    • I think how proud I am of her for going from fearing racists to wanting to fight them.
    • He found most to be uneducated racists with little to offer a discerning and spiritually hungry young man.
    • Moreover, such discrimination played into the hands of racists who argued less that races were unequal than that national and racial differences were objective and insurmountable and that assimilation would never work, in order to justify their argument that immigrants should be sent home.
    Synonyms
    racial bigot, racialist, xenophobe, chauvinist
    anti-Semite
    (racially) discriminatory, racialist, prejudiced, bigoted, biased, intolerant, illiberal
    anti-Semitic
adjective ˈreɪsɪstˈreɪsəst
  • Showing or feeling discrimination or prejudice against people of other races, or believing that a particular race is superior to another.

    we are investigating complaints about racist abuse at a newsagents
    Example sentencesExamples
    • In other words, do you think our society is making progress toward becoming less racist?
    • We now have rules, regulations and laws against racism, and more people are taught not to be racist.
    • I think we still have certain people who are racist in attitudes.
    • You claim I must be racist.
    • Immigration controls are, in any case, inherently racist.
    • I don't reject friends because they politically aren't like me, or they are racist, gay or whatever.
    • There is something racist in expelling those people from the country once they become unemployed.
    • The politicians are prepared to accept, on occasion, that some people are racist.
    • Any old comment I make is immediately construed to be racist by some people.
    • In only a few cases, he said, did it appear an employer was actively racist in his hiring practices.
    • To be against the culture of white slave-owners was not to be racist against whites.
    • People might actually have to admit that they themselves are racist!
    • Network Rail has accepted responsibility for the property but said that unless the graffiti was racist or obscene it was not a priority.
    • I have come to the conclusion that I am probably less racist than most people.
    • There are liberals also in many cases that are racist.
    • Nor did he claim that the policies of the Metropolitan Police Service were intentionally racist.
    • She has fallen foul of strict government rules which she condemned today as outdated and racist.

Rhymes

bassist

Definition of racist in US English:

racist

nounˈreɪsəstˈrāsəst
  • A person who shows or feels discrimination or prejudice against people of other races, or who believes that a particular race is superior to another.

    the comments have led to her being called a racist
    Example sentencesExamples
    • I think how proud I am of her for going from fearing racists to wanting to fight them.
    • Moreover, such discrimination played into the hands of racists who argued less that races were unequal than that national and racial differences were objective and insurmountable and that assimilation would never work, in order to justify their argument that immigrants should be sent home.
    • With criminals, terrorists, racists etc etc using the Internet to bypass the police, the police will be increasingly frustrated in its attempts to bring them to justice.
    • She offers words of comfort, but only brash American Dan (Bonar Colleano) actually challenges the racist.
    • Racism is an indelible part of Travis's makeup, but it is important to acknowledge that this is a film about a racist rather than a racist film.
    • He found most to be uneducated racists with little to offer a discerning and spiritually hungry young man.
    • "You may not be a racist but the people who vote for you are," I said to him.
    • He railed against being called a racist, a charge leveled at him off and on throughout his career.
    • Moreover, racists do not need any assistance or prompting in pursuing their malevolent agenda.
    • The basic charge is that these men, critics of capitalism, were racists, anti-Semites, and elitists.
    • The chef is a foul-mouthed racist.
    • They're racists because they are driven by hate, and whatever they do, that viciousness just bubbles over.
    • Baker elicits a stirring performance from Brenda De Banzie as Nell, whose transformation from typical housewife and mother to snarling racist is the centrepiece of the drama.
    • It is time for strong action to be taken to show the racists that their chanting and form of supporting is not welcome.
    • Of these people, misguided as they may be, few are actual racists.
    • I'm not saying that he is a racist, as I know he was only joking, but it's fascinating to me how many people around us, who say they aren't racist, are against interracial relationships.
    • Cinema itself was a popular entertainment by 1904, the year of the novel's setting, and its traces can also be found, not just in the formal experiments of the novel, but in scenes such as the chasing of advertising canvasser Leopold Bloom by a one-eyed racist and a "mangy mongrel."
    • Breton, Surrealism's leader and a past master of character assassination, claimed in the final issue of Minotaure that Dali was a self-confessed racist, and Dali chose not to respond.
    Synonyms
    racial bigot, racialist, xenophobe, chauvinist
    discriminatory, racially discriminatory, racialist, prejudiced, bigoted, biased, intolerant, illiberal
adjectiveˈreɪsəstˈrāsəst
  • Showing or feeling discrimination or prejudice against people of other races, or believing that a particular race is superior to another.

    we are investigating complaints about racist abuse at the club
    Example sentencesExamples
    • There are liberals also in many cases that are racist.
    • I don't reject friends because they politically aren't like me, or they are racist, gay or whatever.
    • The politicians are prepared to accept, on occasion, that some people are racist.
    • I have come to the conclusion that I am probably less racist than most people.
    • In other words, do you think our society is making progress toward becoming less racist?
    • Any old comment I make is immediately construed to be racist by some people.
    • We now have rules, regulations and laws against racism, and more people are taught not to be racist.
    • In only a few cases, he said, did it appear an employer was actively racist in his hiring practices.
    • People might actually have to admit that they themselves are racist!
    • Immigration controls are, in any case, inherently racist.
    • There is something racist in expelling those people from the country once they become unemployed.
    • Network Rail has accepted responsibility for the property but said that unless the graffiti was racist or obscene it was not a priority.
    • Nor did he claim that the policies of the Metropolitan Police Service were intentionally racist.
    • She has fallen foul of strict government rules which she condemned today as outdated and racist.
    • You claim I must be racist.
    • I think we still have certain people who are racist in attitudes.
    • To be against the culture of white slave-owners was not to be racist against whites.
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更新时间:2024/12/27 19:54:04