释义 |
Definition of misandry in English: misandrynoun mɪˈsandrimiˈsandrē mass nounDislike of, contempt for, or ingrained prejudice against men (i.e. the male sex) poorly disguised misandry Example sentencesExamples - Any honest woman will tell you that her alleged misandry is actually a stiletto-sharp version of the conversations we have among ourselves when the boys are out of earshot.
- The middle section of the book (the final third being appendices and an index) opens the discussion up and provides a wrapper to contextualize the spreading of misandry, and to link ideological feminism to misandry.
- Some male students have told me that they had been retaliated against at grade time for speaking out against misandry.
- And funnily enough, the females who go in for this low-grade misandry are usually the ones who are most in thrall to men.
- It's kind of too bad that in 2004, with very liberal - and liberating - views towards sexuality becoming increasingly prevalent, we'd have at least moved past that sort of misandry.
Origin Late 19th century: from Greek miso- 'hating' + anēr, andr- 'man', on the pattern of misogyny. Definition of misandry in US English: misandrynounmiˈsandrē Dislike of, contempt for, or ingrained prejudice against men (i.e. the male sex) poorly disguised misandry Example sentencesExamples - Some male students have told me that they had been retaliated against at grade time for speaking out against misandry.
- It's kind of too bad that in 2004, with very liberal - and liberating - views towards sexuality becoming increasingly prevalent, we'd have at least moved past that sort of misandry.
- The middle section of the book (the final third being appendices and an index) opens the discussion up and provides a wrapper to contextualize the spreading of misandry, and to link ideological feminism to misandry.
- Any honest woman will tell you that her alleged misandry is actually a stiletto-sharp version of the conversations we have among ourselves when the boys are out of earshot.
- And funnily enough, the females who go in for this low-grade misandry are usually the ones who are most in thrall to men.
Origin Late 19th century: from Greek miso- ‘hating’ + anēr, andr- ‘man’, on the pattern of misogyny. |