Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
But I am prejudiced, not being human and never having had any rights.
Of course, I might have been a little prejudiced right that moment.
And still no one is sure how schools can teach anyone to be less prejudiced.
It makes me wonder if I really am prejudiced deep down.
I make it seven, including our clients, not to seem prejudiced.
I would add though the enlightenment is a prejudiced point of view about reason.
The prejudiced often write off whole groups of people as being unacceptable.
"You're saying he's prejudiced or whatever, you want him off your case."
Take, if you want it, the evidence of a prejudiced witness.
"I'm a little too prejudiced to do the job right."
"Some of them are very prejudiced, even now," she told me.
He is far less prejudiced than most of you scientific gentlemen.
If a man is too prejudiced to take an informed opinion, what can be done for him?
Instead they show to my prejudiced eyes that the sea changes were very rapid indeed.
I think, maybe I'm prejudiced, that football is the ultimate team game.
The phrase can also be used to describe a prejudiced judge.
"You're going to have to stop being so prejudiced and provincial.
Prejudiced as your job requires you to be, leave room for detachment.
We need help ourselves in this prejudiced country, America, my home."
I'm afraid you're the victim of your own prejudiced beliefs.
If he's from the North he's probably not as prejudiced.
"I do it out of amusement, because you are so painfully prejudiced."
Not that he was prejudiced or anything, but he just wanted to know.
I don't like him, and it may be that I'm prejudiced.
I have learned people can be cruel and prejudiced because they don't know enough.