TermGallery
English
English
Spanish
Catalan
Portuguese
Russian
EN
English
Español
Català
Português
Русский
Spanish
prejuiciado
(Sometimes followed by `to') causing harm or injury.
damaging
detrimental
prejudicial
harmful
Spanish
prejuiciado
Partiality.
partiality
partisanship
damaging
detrimental
prejudicial
1
Therefore, devaluing the US currency would present a far more
damaging
response.
2
But of course, this same power can be used in
damaging
ways.
3
Failure to deal with the debt crisis is
damaging
confidence in Europe.
4
This is
damaging
police efforts to bring criminals to justice, experts said.
5
The crisis is already showing signs of seriously
damaging
the Russian economy.
1
Blasphemy laws are
detrimental
to freedom of speech and freedom of religion.
2
Anxiety disorders are debilitating psychiatric illnesses with
detrimental
effects on human health.
3
Mr Elliott said the change would be
detrimental
to the legal profession.
4
We need direct-action campaigns that address the
detrimental
effects of these laws.
5
Both diseases have a synergistic
detrimental
effect on the cellular immune response.
1
It may be
prejudicial
to the great end; it may be auxiliary.
2
My confusion was not
prejudicial
to me; she did not perceive it.
3
The last thing we want to do is be exploitative or
prejudicial
.
4
The town's denizens are small-minded,
prejudicial
folk prone to hysteria and fear.
5
These
prejudicial
ways of reacting may be called racial sets or attitudes.
Spanish
prejuiciado