What's the difference between prejudiced and unprejudiced?

Prejudiced


Definition:

  • (imp. & p. p.) of Prejudice

Example Sentences:

  • (1) It is the lack of appreciation of limitations which have prejudiced much opinion against such methods; this article attempts to put their true place in perspective.
  • (2) However, I know a good proportion of that was people who were saying: ‘Usually I would be putting up with this, I would kind of shake it off.’” Lowles told the MPs that his group’s research showed that the referendum debate did not appear to prompt people to become prejudiced if they had not been before, but did seemingly influence those already holding such views.
  • (3) By illuminating both the prejudical content of medical theories as well as the emancipatory actions of lesbian and gay communities to change stigmatizing diagnostic and treatment situations, the authors attempt to demystify ideologies about lesbians that motivate clinicians, administrators, educators, researchers, and theorists in the delivery of health services.
  • (4) I am of a similar vintage and, like many friends and fans of the series, bemoan the fact that we are generally treated by society as silly, weak, daft, soppy, prejudiced (even bigoted), risk-averse and wary of new situations.
  • (5) It is older men in manual work who are most likely to admit to being racially prejudiced.
  • (6) As long as the Labour party is biased towards the privileged and prejudiced against the working class, the closed shop will never be opened.
  • (7) However, since 2002, when 42% of Tory supporters said they were very or a little prejudiced (compared with 27% for Labour and 24% for Lib Dems), they have been overtaken by the category classified as “other”.
  • (8) Generally speaking therefore, given that we would not want to run the risk of prejudicing someone's right to a fair trial, it is sensible for us to maintain a situation where we restrict comments on pieces once people have been arrested because of the dangers of people posting prejudicial remarks."
  • (9) Well, I'd be surprised if anyone actually believes it has the power to inspire Damascene conversions among the prejudiced.
  • (10) Although the outlook for pre-eclampsia with heavy proteinuria is limited, in a few cases pregnancy can be prolonged for significant periods of time without apparently prejudicing maternal safety and permitting enhancement of maturity at birth.
  • (11) Lawyers acting for the attorney general said in the high court last month that articles published by the papers would have seriously prejudiced any trial Jefferies might have faced.
  • (12) In addition, when asserting that an archive publication creates a substantial risk that the course of justice will be seriously impeded or prejudiced the applicant should be forced to demonstrate why judicial directions to the jury would not be effective in each individual case."
  • (13) The BSA survey shows that the West Midlands has the highest proportion of people – 36% – who say they are a little or very prejudiced against people of other races in the UK.
  • (14) By setting it up before any criminal prosecutions, it effectively barred the inquiry from examining in detail the very crimes that were its cause for fear of prejudicing pending proceedings.
  • (15) Seventy two per cent said "not at all prejudiced" and, pleasingly, just 2% said "very".
  • (16) That is why I have changed Labour's position on immigration since 2010 because it is not prejudiced to worry about immigration.
  • (17) It is hard to see how this could not be prejudiced.
  • (18) Physicians, however, are apprehensive of such flexibel criteria, and perhaps even prejudiced against "the lawyers" who, rather than directing their attention to the needs of the individual doctor-patient relationship, tend to think in terms of the principles involved.
  • (19) Navratilova, a winner of 18 grand slam singles titles, said: “It is really disheartening to see Ray Moore offer the extremely prejudiced and very old-fashioned statements regarding women tennis players.
  • (20) I don't know what's in the mind of someone else, I don't know if someone is prejudiced, the only thing I can do is work as hard as I can until people can no longer ignore me, turn up for everything I'm booked for and do it to the best of my ability."

Unprejudiced


Definition:

  • (a.) Not prejudiced; free from undue bias or prepossession; not preoccupied by opinion; impartial; as, an unprejudiced mind; an unprejudiced judge.
  • (a.) Not warped or biased by prejudice; as, an unprejudiced judgment.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The surveyed hospital pharmacists generally demonstrated healthy, unprejudiced views toward psychiatrists and mentally ill patients; however, their attitudes toward mental hospitals were skewed in the negative direction.
  • (2) It is concluded that the efforts of the nondisabled to show an unprejudiced attitude toward a disabled interaction partner are mostly effective in other aspects of behavior than the amount of self-disclosure.
  • (3) So an investigation must take place, an independent investigation, unprejudiced, to decide whether or not tax has been paid.” As well as pressing Cameron, the Labour leader called for a cleanup of Britain’s overseas territories and dependencies, including the British Virgin Islands, which accounts for about half the companies named in the Panama Papers.
  • (4) The connections between childhood assault and adult adjustment will be missed unless the therapist can find an unprejudiced path toward mutual acceptance.
  • (5) The current attitude, that adolescents, minority women, and young mothers with several children are in need of the most highly effective birth control method does little to encourage an unprejudiced presentation of other methods.
  • (6) In order to leave the investigators unprejudiced, all sera were coded and intermixed with controls of rabbit EAE serum which had a potent demyelinating capacity.
  • (7) Continuous glucose monitoring by portable instruments is the only and irreplaceable prerequisite for unprejudiced evaluation of the various strategies for substitution of the insulin deficiency in any form of diabetes.
  • (8) So an investigation must take place, an independent investigation, unprejudiced, to decide whether or not tax has been paid.
  • (9) Whitehall's unprejudiced support for the government of the day regardless of colour is a constitutional – if unrecorded – keystone.
  • (10) It is concluded that supplementation of alcoholic beverages in Queensland with thiamine (and in particular with one of the allithiamines) warrants urgent and unprejudiced consideration.
  • (11) "Imagine an eye unruled by man-made laws of perspective," he wrote in Metaphors On Vision, first published in the journal Film Culture in 1963, "an eye unprejudiced by compositional logic, an eye which does not respond to the name of everything but which must know each object encountered in life through an adventure of perception.
  • (12) They like him to have the picture of these nuggety facts lying about on maybe frozen ground, and a lot of noble and utterly unprejudiced journalists with no idea whatever of what they are looking for scrabbling in the iron-bound earth and presently bringing home the pure gold of Truth."
  • (13) Published in 1823, his book is billed on the title page as being: “The unprejudiced, authentic and highly interesting account which that stupendous and beautiful edifice Stonehenge in Wiltshire is found to give of itself.” Inside he describes how Stonehenge was one of the few structures in the UK that must have survived Noah’s flood.
  • (14) For Brakhage, the goal of cinema was the liberation of the eye itself, the creation of an act of seeing, previously unimagined and undefined by conventions of representation, an eye as natural and unprejudiced as that of a cat, a bee or an infant.
  • (15) So step forward the new Andy Murray – free spirit, sensitive, self-aware and unprejudiced.
  • (16) A guide dog user himself, the author nevertheless sets out to put forth in as unprejudiced a manner as possible the pros and cons of this mobility aid for blind persons.
  • (17) But if the process of asking and answering such questions did not reveal to any sane, unprejudiced mind the necessity and the virtue of subsidy, then I would eat my desk.
  • (18) Clearly, continuous blood glucose monitoring by portable instruments is the only and absolute prerequisite for unprejudiced evaluation of the various strategies for substitution of insulin deficiency in any form of diabetes mellitus.
  • (19) An unprejudiced critic would not be convinced by existing data.

Words possibly related to "unprejudiced"