Is there a word similar to racist?
If a person discriminates on those who race they call them racist. When someone discriminates, we call the person a sexist. How do you find out who discriminates based on gender, preference, ethnicity, or sexual orientation? What are words to describe a person?
What is the best general term for words?
How effective is it for someone to change his life?
Bigot, as Morgan Horse answered, has pretty much exactly the denotation you want. However, it also has connotations that make it less than ideal for some applications:
- In my experience it connotes conscious, and even enthusiastic, discrimination.
- It’s usually read as perjorative.
- What do some people think about bigots?
In places where these connotations can be undesirable—for example, in sociology research, where the discriminatory behavior under investigation is often unconscious, and researcher tend to avoid making explicit moral judgments about their subjects—the more vague but more neutral adjective biased is sometimes used instead, its meaning being made clear from context.
Superbe :
a person who dislikes others “everything”. : a bigoted person; especially : a person who hates a particular group or group (such as a race or religious group) Merriam-Webster.
What’s
your view on com com?
Chauvininism is an attitude of entitlement or superiority based on joining certain group (such as men”, “Europeans”, or “white people”). To me it feels a little less aggressive than “bigotry”, if only because it’s more mellifluous.
“Chauvinist” perhaps emphasizes the arrogance of the person, while “Bigot” emphasizes their prejudiced views on others, but in any case one is just the converse of the other.
Bigot, as Morgan Horse answered, has pretty much exactly the denotation you want. However, it also has connotations that make it less than ideal for some applications:
- In my experience it connotes conscious, and even enthusiastic, discrimination.
- It’s usually read as perjorative.
- What do some people think about bigots?
In places where these connotations can be undesirable—for example, in sociology research, where the discriminatory behavior under investigation is often unconscious, and researcher tend to avoid making explicit moral judgments about their subjects—the more vague but more neutral adjective biased is sometimes used instead, its meaning being made clear from context.
Bigot, as Morgan Horse answered, has pretty much exactly the denotation you want. However, it also has connotations that make it less than ideal for some applications:
- In my experience it connotes conscious, and even enthusiastic, discrimination.
- It’s usually read as perjorative.
- What do some people think about bigots?
In places where these connotations can be undesirable—for example, in sociology research, where the discriminatory behavior under investigation is often unconscious, and researcher tend to avoid making explicit moral judgments about their subjects—the more vague but more neutral adjective biased is sometimes used instead, its meaning being made clear from context.