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generational

[ UK /d‍ʒˌɛnəɹˈe‍ɪʃənə‍l/ ]
[ US /ˌdʒɛnɝˈeɪʃənəɫ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. of or relating to a generation

How To Use generational In A Sentence

  • The welfare state was not set up to support vast families or single mothers in inter-generational welfare dependency. We deserve a fair society, but it won't be created by a vendetta against the poor
  • And the people who were subjected to hard yakka, slave labour if you want, or removal from islands because of drinking problems or fighting and they have complete hate and they've handed it down generationally.
  • One can strip the fifties of its illusive aura of dull conformity without inflating cultural dissidence or generational muscle-flexing into political resistance.
  • Some men maintained protective intergenerational boundaries by distancing themselves from disapproving parents.
  • The film doesn't stop at intergenerational same-sex relations or drug trips.
  • However, many black South African elders are living in multigenerational homes with family members dependent on their pensions for survival.
  • Perhaps because black, Hispanic and Asian households tend to be larger and often multigenerational, teens in these groups are significantly more likely than white teens to recognize someone other than their mother or stepmother.
  • That is why it has hit a generational nerve, as if no one had told that story before.
  • The result is a gripping examination of generational change and a moving tribute to heroism. Times, Sunday Times
  • Thus we are told we have to be very sensitive to generational differences and how to manage them. Times, Sunday Times
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