bigot
/ˈbɪɡət/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈbɪɡət/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈbi-gət/ (ame, mw)
bigot — 名詞
- bigotsingular
- bigotsplural
1. A person who stubbornly refuses to accept people whose beliefs, religion, race,
偏執者
對不同背景抱有頑固偏見的人
A person who stubbornly refuses to accept people whose beliefs, religion, race, or politics differ from their own, often expressing this through prejudice or hostility.
Mr. Okonkwo was called a bigot for refusing to hire anyone of a different faith.
Mr. Okonkwo 因拒絕僱用不同信仰的人而被稱為偏執者。
collocation: called a bigot / labelled a bigot
Fatima's boss was a bigot who mocked her accent in front of customers.
Fatima 的老闆是個偏執者,會在顧客面前嘲笑她的口音。
Ji-hoon confronted the bigot at the bus stop who was shouting at immigrants.
Ji-hoon 在公車站與那個對移民大吼大叫的偏執者對質。
The council member was exposed as a bigot during a debate on refugee housing.
那位市議員在關於難民住房的辯論中被揭露是偏執者。
Santiago finally understood his uncle was a bigot when he insulted their neighbours' cooking.
Santiago 終於明白他叔叔是個偏執者,因為他侮辱了鄰居的料理。
- prejudiced person
broader term; someone may be prejudiced without the active hostility that 'bigot' implies
- chauvinist
specifically someone who believes their own gender or nation is superior to others
- zealot
more about extreme devotion to a cause than about group-based intolerance
- sectarian
narrower; refers only to prejudice between religious groups or denominations
- tolerant person
someone who accepts differences in belief, background, or identity
- open-minded person
someone willing to consider views they do not share
用法筆記
The word is always strongly negative and accusatory. A bigot is not merely stubborn about personal habits — the intolerance must target a group of people based on identity, belief, or background. Calling someone a bigot is a serious charge.