Idioms for bias
- in the diagonal direction of the cloth.
- out of line; slanting.
on the bias,
Origin of bias
1520–30; < Middle French
biais oblique < Old Provençal, probably < Vulgar Latin *(
e)bigassius < Greek
epikársios oblique, equivalent to
epi-
epi- +
-karsios oblique
SYNONYMS FOR bias
synonym study for bias
1.
Bias,
prejudice mean a strong inclination of the mind or a preconceived opinion about something or someone. A
bias may be favorable or unfavorable:
bias in favor of or against an idea.
Prejudice implies a preformed judgment even more unreasoning than
bias, and usually implies an unfavorable opinion:
prejudice against people of another religion.
OTHER WORDS FROM bias
sub·bi·as, noun su·per·bi·as, nounWords nearby bias
Definition for bias (2 of 4)
Bias
[ bahy-uh s ]
/ ˈbaɪ əs /
noun
flourished 570 b.c.,
Greek philosopher, born in Ionia.
Definition for bias (3 of 4)
Bia
[ bahy-uh ]
/ ˈbaɪ ə /
noun
the ancient Greek personification of force: daughter of Pallas and Styx and sister of Cratus, Nike, and Zelos.
Definition for bias (4 of 4)
Beas
or Bi·as
[ bee-ahs ]
/ ˈbi ɑs /
noun
a river in NW India, flowing SW into the Sutlej River: one of the five rivers of the Punjab. 290 miles (470 km) long.
Ancient
Hyph·a·sis
[hif-uh-sis] /ˈhɪf ə sɪs/.
Example sentences from the Web for bias
British Dictionary definitions for bias
Derived forms of bias
biased or biassed, adjectiveWord Origin for bias
C16: from Old French
biais, from Old Provençal, perhaps ultimately from Greek
epikarsios oblique