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Protective discrimination helps to protect from social discrimination in the sense that it stops discrimination, or attempts to stop it, before it can even happen.
Protective discrimination helps to protect from social discrimination in the sense that it stops discrimination, or attempts to stop it, before it can even happen.
The word "discrimination" originates from the Latin word "discriminatio," which means to distinguish or differentiate between things. It does not have a specific country of origin, as Latin was spoken in ancient Rome and influenced many languages worldwide.
The reverse, in the sense of undoing the effects of "divide by 21" is "multiply by 21".
Identity labels can often contribute to discrimination in the sense that they can perpetuate common existing stereotypes that lead to self-fulfilling prophecies.
Not in the conventional sense, but some turbine aircraft can reverse the propeller thrust while on the ground.
sense question Your makes no.
Sentences using the word 'discrimination' - making distinctions between people or things, in one sense doing so unfairly, or, in another sense, doing so because of highly-developed skills in testing the merits of related things - include: Gender discrimination is demonstrated in the assumption that a man performs better that a woman, or that a woman performs better than a man, in any occupation. We all admire his fine tastes in literature, his great talent for discrimination between the truly good and the mediocre. Our city once routinely displayed unfair discrimination towards minority groups, but this has radically changed in past decades. Take her advice when it comes to restaurants; she has a marvellous sense of discrimination when it comes to fine dining.
Ball (in the baseball sense) or carress (in the general sense)
Touch
The function of the medial lemniscal system is to transmit impulses that produce our more discrimination touch and pressure sensations, including stereognosis (awareness of an object's size, shape, and texture), precise localization, two-point discrimination, weight discrimination, and sense of vibrations.
In a religious sense, no. In the general sense that things should work out, certainly.