Yes, and prejudicial is too.
I don't want to hear his prejudiced views.
Disclosure of that information could be prejudicial to the company.
The adjective for prejudice is "prejudiced."
Prejudiced is an adjective meaning: "having a preconceived idea about something that isn't based on fact" "Janice is prejudiced; she thinks boys are all stupid."
No, the sentence "You are prejudice" is not grammatically correct. Prejudice is a noun, and you is a pronoun. The sentence essentially is saying that "you" are something that you can not possibly be - the noun prejudice. To make the point you're trying to make, you need an adjective to follow the verb "are." Prejudiced is the descriptive adjective form of prejudice, so the grammatically correct sentence should be "You are prejudiced."
An antonym for prejudiced is objective.
The word may be one of these:racist - (noun, adjective) prejudiced against other races; a bigotrecess - to adjourn, or school play timeraces - speed competitions
The base word for prejudiced is judge.
Correct:I am prejudiced against ...You are prejudiced against ...I have a prejudice againstYou have a prejudice against
No Jesus was not prejudiced as he was the sinless Son of God.
Its bias becuase unbias means your not prejudiced on the subject
No.
of Prejudice
Jews.