Sentence examples for prejudicial terms from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

Leroi dismisses those who are concerned about the risks of genetic experiments on humans as "soi-disant ethicists, dialectical biologists and bishops", who, he claims in prejudicial terms, "speak portentously of a 'human dignity'... or else mutter darkly about the 'ethical dilemmas that face us all' ".

Similar(59)

The inability to differentiate between AA-containing CHMs and non-AA CHMs had also resulted in the prejudicial term 'Chinese herbal nephropathy' and led many western medicine practitioners to warn the patients with CKD against the use of any CHMs.

"You have to debate whether making a pre-emptive decision - to remove him from the captaincy or to allow play for England or not - would in terms be prejudicial.

Practically everything Ecclestone does now can be seen as prejudicial to the long-term health of Formula One.

AU: We agree with the reviewer that the term monolignol can be prejudicial.

In using that hot-button term, I'm summing up the snooty, prejudicial stereotype that Norah Vincent, to her credit, proceeds to dismantle with her reporting and shrewd observations.

For as he understands the term, it already seems to harbour a prejudicial philosophical dualism in which that which is defined as "natural" – and thereby supposedly amenable to rational, empirical investigation through the methods of the natural sciences – is pitted against that which somehow floats above the natural and is thereby necessarily a matter of speculative, unreasoning faith.

Her use of the inflammatory and made-up term "neurosexism" is further supported by her use of prejudicial words such as "neurononsense" and "neuroscientific" (the closeness to "pseudoscientific" is undoubtedly intentional).

Second, the term rigged has an unfortunate connotation of illegitimacy, as in the terms rigged election or rigged roulette table, and this connotation must be dismissed as prejudicial.

If found guilty they can be fined not less than RM10,000 or not more than RM50,000 and or imprisoned for not exceeding five years; b) 298A Penal Code for promoting enmity between different groups of religion or race and doing acts prejudicial to maintaining harmony by publishing an offensive Ramadan greeting which carries a minimum jail term of two years or a maximum of five years; and.

Why do we need to glorify or vilify others (and in the most passionate terms) when we don't have a basis to do so other than our own prejudicial assumptions?

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