Use "stigmatize|stigmatized|stigmatizes|stigmatizing" in a sentence

1. They stigmatize these propositions as'stifling '.

2. I've been persecuted, stigmatized.

3. Even the lonely stigmatized the lonely.

4. Abastardize (Verb) To stigmatize as a bastard; debase

5. Abastardize To Abastardize means to stigmatize as a bastard; debase

6. He was stigmatized as a violator of the agreement.

7. “The phrase ‘living in sin’ stigmatizes and isn’t helpful,” stated one church bishop.

8. Abastardize To Abastardize means to stigmatize as a bastard; debase

9. They stigmatize these propositions as " trifling " or " merely verbal ".

10. People should not be stigmatized on the basis of race.

11. What does Abastardize mean? (obsolete) To stigmatize as a bastard; debase

12. Propagandists often use a word like “sect” to stigmatize others.

13. 23 People should not be stigmatized on the basis of race.

14. Eating like that after I was stigmatized all day?

15. They often still balk at being stigmatized as weird.

16. Deportation is especially hard on women from societies that stigmatize divorce.

17. 13 They often still balk at being stigmatized as weird.

18. Single mothers often feel that they are stigmatized by society.

19. Laing regards the concept of mental illness as both unscientific and stigmatizing.

20. IQ testing can stigmatize a child permanently, causing more harm than good Das said.

21. And the differences that mark their speech tend to be stigmatized.

22. She was stigmatized by society because she had a child out of wedlock.

23. Supporters hope the agreement will stigmatize the weapons, and other countries eventually would feel compelled to sign, too.

24. Individuals who develop alcohol and other drug addiction are still stigmatized in Canadian society.

25. Are we kind of stigmatizing people from Arkansas, and this part of the country?

26. He complained that he was being "stigmatized" as a preservationist—someone opposed to legal hunting.

27. But society continues to stigmatize and criminalize living in your vehicle or on the streets.

28. Two years, I was ostracized, I was stigmatized, I was isolated, because I was a victim.

29. The answer to inequality cannot be to build walls, hoard wealth, and stigmatize the poor and vulnerable.

30. This poor fellow occasionally let slipinconsiderate remarks, which the law then stigmatized as seditious speeches.

31. Since offices were regarded as a form of property, reform could be stigmatized as an encroachment upon freehold.

32. By being voluntary and reversible, this arrangement avoids being stigmatized by the United Nations as colonial.

33. This may be made worse if the patient feels stigmatized because he has been a psychiatric inpatient.

34. It also said searches must not stigmatize any traveler, and that airline files can not be permanent but must be purged.

35. Abastardize (third-person singular simple present Abastardizes, present participle abastardizing, simple past and past participle Abastardized) (transitive, obsolete) To stigmatize as a bastard; debase

36. We do not doubt that the Soviets will find proper means of stigmatizing the contemptible Blacklegs of the revolution and its organizations

37. The word Addict is stigmatizing, reducing a person’s identity down to their struggle with substance use and denies their dignity and humanity

38. Mr. Accum, in his Treatise on Culinary Poisons, has stigmatized this process as "fraudulent," but, in our opinion, most unjustly.

39. Abastardize (third-person singular simple present Abastardizes, present participle abastardizing, simple past and past participle Abastardized) (transitive, obsolete) To stigmatize as a bastard; debase

40. Abastardize (third-person singular simple present Abastardizes, present participle abastardizing, simple past and past participle Abastardized) (transitive, obsolete) To stigmatize as a bastard; debase

41. "DOCTRESSES," "Authoresses," AND OTHERS 477 speaking of Ladies' Rights, but stigmatized women workers, wherever he could, with the suffix-ess

42. ‘Includes standard dialects, nonstandard dialects, idiolects (distinctive of an individual), acrolects (prestigious dialects), Basilects (stigmatized dialects), mesolects (dialects neutral as to prestige).’

43. While Anorectal conditions are often stigmatized and little discussed, these disorders, including hemorrhoids, fistulas and fissures, affect millions of people every year

44. Empowerment-based practice Actuates a strengths perspective, centering the social work process toward competence promotion and away from the stigmatizing notion of deficit reduction

45. Bathhouses may be more likely than churches to be stigmatized as potential sites of coronavirus spread, despite proof religious services have facilitated multiple superspreader events

46. No matter what your current specialty, the area of Appraising stigmatized properties offers a unique opportunity for business growth and career development.

47. Coprolalia is the medical term used to describe one of the most puzzling and socially stigmatizing symptoms of Tourette Syndrome—the involuntary outburst of obscene words or socially inappropriate and derogatory remarks

48. Bullying can look like experienced basketball players systematically intimidating novice players off the court, kids repeatedly stigmatizing immigrant classmates for their cultural differences, or a middle-school girl suddenly being insulted and

49. Before Ryan White, AIDS was a disease stigmatized as an illness impacting the gay community, because it was first diagnosed among gay men.

50. 1400, "to impress or burn a mark upon with a hot iron, cauterize; stigmatize," originally of criminal marks or cauterized wounds, from Brand (n.)

51. Doctrinal judgments by which the Church stigmatizes certain teachings detrimental to faith or morals.They should not be confounded with canonical Censures, such as excommunication, suspension, and interdict, which are spiritual punishments inflicted on delinquents.

52. Now, this makes people crazy because it means that you have to talk about some groups having more sexual partners in shorter spaces of time than other groups, and that's considered stigmatizing.

53. Because patients with mental illnesses were commonly abused or stigmatized, doctors resolved to open hospitals, or Asylums, where they could live and be treated without bias.

54. At the other end of the spectrum, some describe Constantine as “bloodstained, stigmatized by countless enormities and full of deceit, . . . a hideous tyrant, guilty of horrid crimes.”

55. All of us with stigmatized identities face this question daily: How much to accommodate society by constraining ourselves, and how much to break the limits of what constitutes a valid life?

56. Human Branding or stigmatizing is the process by which a mark, usually a symbol or ornamental pattern, is burned into the skin of a living person, with the intention that the resulting scar makes it permanent

57. Though often stigmatized as a gutter DIALECT, Cockney is a major element in the English of LONDON, the core of a diverse variety spoken by some 7m people in the Greater London area

58. 21 Does he not re-collect with what marks of indignation any member was stigmatized as an enemy to this country who mentioned with common respect the name of General Washington?

59. In this sense, advocates of Appropriateness-based models of language education overlook the ways that particular people’s linguistic practices can be stigmatized regardless of the extent to which they approximate or correspond to standard forms.

60. Moreover, a history of mental disorder is usually Concealable, and stigmatized conditions that can be hidden - as opposed to those that are visible - yield considerable anxiety and stress for those who have them

61. The conduct of Pretorius was stigmatized as " Blameworthy. As regards original sin they taught that the inclinations to evil inherited from Adam are not themselves Blameworthy, and only consent to them involves real guilt. Blameworthy …

62. Babylon originally was founded as a breakaway from the worship of Jehovah and from allegiance to him as God, for Babylon was established by the rebel Nimrod, stigmatized in the Bible as “Nimrod a mighty hunter in opposition to Jehovah.”

63. Dallas Buyers Club is a 2013 American biographical drama film written by Craig Borten and Melisa Wallack, and directed by Jean-Marc Vallée.The film tells the story of Ron Woodroof (Matthew McConaughey), an AIDS patient diagnosed in the mid 1980s when HIV/AIDS treatments were under-researched, while the disease was not understood and highly stigmatized

64. In his moving blend of memoir and political theory, Covering, Kenji Yoshino alternates between recounting his own experiences as a gay Japanese-American man and elaborating upon his thesis that American life at the start of the twenty-first century is shaped by the demand to “cover,” or downplay, stigmatized identities in public.In the book’s first half the author convincingly

65. Whatever concerns personal coercion of the accused is closely bound up with the type of trial being conducted since, if it is authoritarian- i.e. with an undisguisable stigmatizing effect- that coercion can be used as a sort of advance punishment threatening the defendant, in this way, with the mere suspicion or simple appearance of guilt, while if one adheres to an accusatory philosophy there will be no resort either to a trial or to deprivation of liberty with punitive implications, taking into account that, until guilt is demonstrated, the accused is presumed innocent