victimisation
/ˌvɪk.tɪ.maɪˈzeɪ.ʃən/ (bre, ipa) · /ˌvɪk.tə.məˈzeɪ.ʃən/ (ame, ipa)
victimisation — 名詞
1. unfair treatment that repeatedly harms someone or makes them an easy target
欺壓;迫害
使人反覆遭受欺壓或迫害
unfair treatment that repeatedly harms someone or makes them an easy target
The report describes victimisation of girls who refused a forced marriage.
那份報告描述了拒絕強迫婚姻的女孩所遭受的欺壓。
pattern: victimisation of + group
After months of mocking and threats, Meera reported workplace victimisation.
在幾個月的嘲弄與威脅後,Meera 通報了職場欺壓。
collocation: workplace victimisation
The law was changed to reduce victimisation of witnesses in court.
這項法律被修改,以減少證人在法庭上遭受的欺壓。
Online victimisation left Benjamin afraid to check his phone at school.
網路欺壓讓 Benjamin 不敢在學校查看手機。
Years of racial victimisation pushed the family to leave the country.
多年的種族迫害逼得那家人離開自己的國家。
- harassment
is broader and often used for repeated hostile behavior in daily life or at work
- bullying
is more common for school or workplace settings where stronger people pick on weaker ones
- discrimination
focuses on unfair treatment based on sex, race, age, or another protected trait
- persecution
is stronger and usually suggests cruel treatment tied to identity, belief, or politics
- protection
focuses on keeping people safe from harm or abuse
- support
suggests helpful treatment instead of harmful targeting
- fair treatment
emphasizes being treated justly rather than being singled out
文法句型
victimisation of somebody
experience victimisation
report victimisation
workplace victimisation
用法筆記
Usually used in formal discussions of bullying, discrimination, or crime. It often takes of to name the people affected, and American English usually spells the word victimization.