biased prejudgment. basically believing in stereotypes.
examples:
assuming white people cant dance
assuming Jewish people will take your money
assuming a movie with Tom Hanks will be enjoyable
assuming that someone driving a ferrari has money.
The quality or condition of judging someone or a group of people before you meet them, usually using stereotypes.
Making a judgment call about someone or an event without all the facts.
Prejudice
She faced prejudice when applying for the job because of her ethnicity.
Bias
The preposition "against" is typically used after the word "prejudice." For example, one might say "prejudice against a certain group of people."
No, prejudice does not have a suffix. "Prejudice" is a word that comes from the Latin "praejudicium," which means "prejudgment." There is no suffix added to this root word in the English language.
Prejudice is harmful and unfair judgment based on preconceived notions rather than facts.
The word antisemitism means prejudice against or hatred of Jews.
The word is spelled prejudice. The riot clearly showed prejudice in the city.
The Malayalam word for 'Munvidhi' is 'เดฎเตเตปเดตเดฟเดงเดฟ'.
The word prejudice means to "pre-judge" people or something based on minimal knowledge of their or its true worth.
When someone says that prejudice prevails they mean that prejudice has won. This means that justice was not found for example.
The root word of prejudice is jud- which means to judge. Combined with the prefix pre- which means before, prejudice has the meaning of to judge before.