narrow minded in English

adjective
1
not willing to listen to or tolerate other people's views; prejudiced.
The professor also slammed the government's research funding agencies for narrow-minded views on how to train researchers.

Use "narrow minded" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "narrow minded" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "narrow minded", or refer to the context using the word "narrow minded" in the English Dictionary.

1. She's infuriating and stubborn and narrow-minded.

2. The Creator of mankind is not narrow-minded.

3. “The Bible’s view of homosexuality is narrow-minded!”

4. She says that some people are narrow minded.

5. She' s infuriating and stubborn and narrow- minded

6. 11 What a pig-head,[www.Sentencedict.com] narrow-minded jerk!

7. Blinkered definition is - limited in scope or understanding : narrow-minded.

8. Ahvaz is a cosmopolitan city that cannot be defined by narrow-minded ethno-nationalism.

9. He is critical of the monks, whom he considers narrow-minded and self-righteous.

10. 19 It would be narrow-minded and bigoted not to welcome these convergent developments.

11. Is it narrow-minded to restrict ourselves so much in the matter of entertainment?

12. 17 He is critical of the monks, whom he considers narrow-minded and self-righteous.

13. But I think they prefer being double-minded over what they Allege is narrow-minded

14. Antonyms for Acceptant include unreceptive, narrow-minded, unresponsive, biased, prejudiced, resistant, cold, cool, hostile and insensitive

15. Antonyms for Attuned include unreceptive, narrow-minded, unresponsive, biased, prejudiced, resistant, cold, cool, hostile and insensitive

16. 8 We should not be quite so narrow-minded, blinkered and xenophobic about the rest of the world.

17. Of course some of Our Guild Members are dare I say it just that wee bit narrow minded.

18. 'hideous, dry, parched, narrow-minded, but my prudent, amassing, calculating Buildress and progenitrix'.6 Edmund Lodge put her character succinctly and not inaccurately

19. But even that argument is narrow-minded because it Assumes women are monolithic and all have the same needs, interests and political positions

20. Bureaucrat [ (byoor-uh-krat) ] Someone who works in or controls a bureaucracy. The term is often used negatively to describe a petty, narrow-minded person.

21. 19 It is with narrow-minded people as with narrow-necked bottle; the less they have in them the more noise they make in pouring out. 

22. In contrast, the Samaritans found that the message of the good news ignored class distinctions, and thus it differed greatly from the narrow-minded thinking of the Pharisees.

23. CyberBalkanization is the segregation of the Internet into smaller groups with similar interests, to a degree that they show a narrow-minded approach to outsiders or those with contradictory views

24. Geymonat points out in his book Galileo Galilei: “Narrow-minded theologians who wanted to limit science on the basis of biblical reasoning would do nothing but cast discredit upon the Bible itself.”

25. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Broadminded broad‧mind‧ed, broad-minded / ˌbrɔːdˈmaɪndɪd $ ˌbrɒːd-/ adjective STRICT willing to respect opinions or behaviour that are very different from your own OPP narrow-minded Her parents were Broadminded, tolerant, and liberal

26. (Revelation 18:4, 5) Yes, God himself is deeply offended by religion that ‘encourages strife, numbs the human conscience, fills the brain with escapist fantasies, and causes people to be narrow-minded, superstitious, and full of hatred and fear’!

27. ‘A tough, Bluff man, he had no desire to relive ancient trouble.’ ‘Beneath his Bluff exterior, he is a narrow-minded reactionary with merely some financial success.’ ‘Megan looked over and up at a tall and Bluff boy she's seen at school before standing in the doorway of what seemed to be his compartment.’

28. Crucially, the mother is shown to be old-fashioned and narrow-minded; couples formed by ‘reason’ are, the novelist suggests, a lot less happy than those guided by instinct.The book works with the growing Romantic assumption that relationships should be based on sentiment and that the best chances of finding someone we can get on well with