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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a bit entitled" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone who has a slight sense of entitlement or believes they deserve certain privileges or treatment.
Example: "She seemed a bit entitled when she demanded special treatment at the restaurant."
Alternatives: "somewhat privileged" or "a little self-important".
Exact(2)
This, in and of itself, is not misogyny; it's a bit entitled, but it's not misogyny.
Perhaps they've taken the easy path in life, haven't applied themselves, feel a bit entitled, maybe even stunted their brain's potential with chemicals or not continuing their education... in a word, they're immature.
Similar(57)
This means the children tend to become a little bit entitled, expecting and in need of constant appraisal and applause.
Monica Lewinsky and I were both in our early 20s in the mid-'90s, both zaftig and flirtatious, both precocious and probably a bit entitled-seeming, and both employed in Washington institutions, though my time in the edit booths of NPR can hardly compare to her time in the private bathroom off the Oval Office.
You get that, Pop?" It was a bit on the entitled side, slightly rude, and condescending.
Through friends, he managed to smuggle out, bit by bit, a manifesto entitled "Ma'alim fi al-Tariq" ("Milestones").
When I thought of her in those terms, and understood that she was every bit as entitled to her ecstasies and sorrows as was Woolf, she became a person.
They're making a fundamentally conventional home, and no one around them suggests they're not every bit as entitled to it as anyone else.
Ms. Gillibrand said her generation of women at Dartmouth believed deeply that they were every bit as entitled as the men to be there.
But the rest of the band have pursued their own creative paths post-Oils, and Garrett is every bit as entitled to his.
And they are every bit as entitled to express their views publicly, and to give their former civilian superiors a hard time in the process, as were Andrew Jackson in 1824, and Dwight Eisenhower in 1952 — not to mention the nine other ex-generals who became President, beginning with General George Washington (ret)., in 1789.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com