prejudiced
adjective
[ ˈprɛdʒədɪst ]
• having or showing a dislike or distrust that is derived from prejudice; bigoted.
• "people are prejudiced against us"
Similar:
biased,
bigoted,
discriminatory,
partisan,
partial,
one-sided,
jaundiced,
intolerant,
narrow-minded,
unfair,
unjust,
inequitable,
non-objective,
unobjective,
blinkered,
parti pris,
coloured,
distorted,
warped,
loaded,
weighted,
racist,
racialist,
anti-Semitic,
chauvinistic,
chauvinist,
sexist,
heterosexist,
homophobic,
anti-gay,
ageist,
disablist,
classist,
fattist,
prejudice
verb
• give rise to prejudice in (someone); make biased.
• "the statement might prejudice the jury"
Similar:
bias,
influence,
sway,
predispose,
make biased,
make partial,
make partisan,
colour,
poison,
jaundice,
warp,
twist,
slant,
distort,
prepossess,
• cause harm to (a state of affairs).
• "delay is likely to prejudice the child's welfare"
Similar:
damage,
be detrimental to,
be prejudicial to,
be disadvantageous to,
injure,
harm,
hurt,
mar,
spoil,
impair,
undermine,
be deleterious to,
hinder,
compromise,
Origin:
Middle English (in prejudice (sense 2 of the noun)): from Old French, from Latin praejudicium, from prae ‘in advance’ + judicium ‘judgement’.
with prejudice
• extinguishing any right to pursue a claim in another suit.
• "the suit was dismissed with prejudice"