prejudice
How to Use Prejudice
Learner’s notesIn plain EnglishA biased opinion held before knowing the facts, or (as a verb) to harm someone's chances unfairly.
In legal English, "without prejudice" means a statement can't be used against you later — a very different sense from everyday "prejudice" as bias.
Word Forms
prejudiced past tense, prejudices plural, prejudices singular
Fill the Gap
Can you complete this real example?
He judged the candidate with obvious _____ before the interview even started.
Etymology
From Old French prejudice, from Latin praeiudicium ("a prior judgment or injury"), from prae- ("before") plus iudicium ("judgment").