[
UK
/bˈaɪəst/
]
[ US /ˈbaɪəst/ ]
[ US /ˈbaɪəst/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
favoring one person or side over another
a biased account of the trial
a decision that was partial to the defendant
How To Use biased In A Sentence
- U.S. network CNN for what it called biased reports on political unrest and on the alleged assault and torture earlier this month of opposition leaders, including Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the main ANC Daily News Briefing
- I must admit to being a biased Observor here, as I do relatively poorly with the math elements of Economics, and I have attempted a writing career of expressing Economics in nonmathematical terms. Math and Economics, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
- Scores of jurors were quickly dismissed yesterday as the judge tackled the daunting task of finding an unbiased jury. Times, Sunday Times
- Complain about their bad grammar or poor choice of headlines or biased editorials.
- Still less can they accept impartial public broadcasting combined with a biased press and biased satellite television.
- Any words that strike you as important or meaningful, words that you feel are stressed, biased, repeated or isolated.
- An adjudicator must be, and must be seen to be, disinterested, unbiased and impartial.
- Participants were randomly assigned by an ‘adaptive biased coin’ technique, rather than simple equiprobable randomisation, to ensure balance of group numbers.
- At last, the author use the corpus and questionnaire survey to discovers the Vietnamese students' biased error give her advice for the department of teaching Chinese as a second language.
- If it does not reject this biased report, it would vitiate itself, it would begin - or re-begin the process of vitiating itself from its own relevance and importance. CNN Transcript Sep 24, 2009