bigoted
/ˈbɪɡətɪd/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈbɪɡətɪd/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈbi-gə-təd/ (ame, mw)
bigoted — 形容詞
- bigotedpositive
- more bigotedcomparative
- most bigotedsuperlative
1. holding fixed, unfair views about a group of people — usually a racial, religiou
偏執的
固持偏見而無法容忍異己的
holding fixed, unfair views about a group of people — usually a racial, religious, or political group — and refusing to consider other viewpoints or to treat those people with respect.
The school board removed the principal after his bigoted comments about immigrant families appeared online.
校務委員會將校長解職,因為他針對移民家庭的偏執言詞在網路上曝光。
bigoted comments
Kofi ended a long friendship when his colleague made bigoted jokes during lunch.
Kofi 因同事在午餐時說了偏執的笑話,而結束了一段長久的友誼。
Sofia wrote to the editor, condemning the bigoted policies of the local housing association.
Sofia 寫信給編輯,譴責當地住宅協會的偏執政策。
Wei felt deeply hurt when trusted friends made bigoted remarks about his culture.
Wei 因信任的朋友說出偏執言論詆毀他的文化而感到非常受傷。
Vikram spoke up at the town meeting to oppose the bigoted proposal about rental housing.
Vikram 在鎮民大會上發言,反對那項針對租屋的偏執提案。
- prejudiced
broader term — can describe any pre-formed judgment; 'bigoted' specifically suggests refusal to change.
- intolerant
similar strength but wider scope — can apply to any difference (lifestyle, appearance, opinion).
- narrow-minded
less severe — implies limited perspective rather than active hostility.
- open-minded
most direct opposite; willingness to consider different ideas and treat all people fairly.
- tolerant
accepting of differences even when one disagrees.
用法筆記
Stronger in tone than 'narrow-minded' because 'bigoted' implies active hostility and moral disapproval toward a group, not just a lack of experience or exposure. The noun forms are 'bigot' (a person) and 'bigotry' (the behaviour or attitude).