Bias
1 Americannoun
noun
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a particular tendency, trend, inclination, feeling, or opinion, especially one that is preconceived or unreasoned.
The hiring manager was found to have shown bias against job applicants who wore less expensive clothing.
The magazine’s bias is toward art rather than photography.
We need to set aside our strong bias in favor of the idea and evaluate it logically.
- Synonyms:
- leaning, bent, proclivity, partiality, predilection, preconception, predisposition
- Antonyms:
- impartiality
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unreasonably hostile feelings or opinions about a social group; prejudice.
The show’s host has faced accusations of racial bias.
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an oblique or diagonal line of direction, especially across a woven fabric.
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Statistics. a systematic as opposed to random distortion of a statistic as a result of sampling procedure.
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Electronics. the application of a steady voltage or current to an active device, such as a diode or transistor, to produce a desired mode of operation.
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a high-frequency alternating current applied to the recording head of a tape recorder during recording in order to reduce distortion.
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Lawn Bowling.
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a slight bulge or greater weight on one side of the ball or bowl.
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the curved course made by such a ball when rolled.
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adjective
adverb
verb (used with object)
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to cause to hold or exhibit a particular bias; to influence, especially unfairly.
The defendant gave a tearful plea designed to bias the jury.
The survey was heavily biased toward highly educated people.
- Synonyms:
- bend, predispose, dispose, incline
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Electronics. to apply a steady voltage or current to (the input of an active device).
idioms
noun
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mental tendency or inclination, esp an irrational preference or prejudice
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a diagonal line or cut across the weave of a fabric
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electronics the voltage applied to an electronic device or system to establish suitable working conditions
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bowls
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a bulge or weight inside one side of a bowl
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the curved course of such a bowl on the green
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statistics
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an extraneous latent influence on, unrecognized conflated variable in, or selectivity in a sample which influences its distribution and so renders it unable to reflect the desired population parameters
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if T is an estimator of the parameter θ , the expected value of ( T–θ )
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an inaudible high-frequency signal used to improve the quality of a tape recording
adjective
adverb
verb
Usage
Plural word for bias The plural form of bias is biases, pronounced [ bahy-uhs-eez ] or [ bahy-uhs-ehz ]. The plurals of several other singular words that end in -s are also formed this way, including alias/aliases, moss/mosses, and lens/lenses.However, bias is often used as a mass noun, meaning that in some instances bias may be used as either a singular or a plural form. The plural form biasses is obsolete and should be avoided.
Related Words
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 Word Forms
- biased adjective
- subbias noun
- superbias noun
Etymology
Origin of bias
First recorded in 1520–30; from Middle French biais “obliqueness,” from Old Provençal, probably from Vulgar Latin (e)bigassius (unrecorded), from Greek epikársios “oblique,” from epi- epi- + -karsios “oblique”; alternatively, from Vulgar Latin biaxius (unrecorded) “having two axes” ( bi-, axis )
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
In today’s highly polarized world, consumers see locally produced TV news as the most trusted, least biased, and most relevant to their lives, according to recent studies.
Debt concerns “are not going away” and, if they persist, may leave the Treasury market “biased toward a steeper curve,” Nakamura said.
From MarketWatch
One advantage of its reinforcement-learning method is that it would help avoid human bias, but it has also sped up Anthropic’s ability to improve its models, company executives have said.
This intelligent novel is instead interested in the effects of gossip, bias and assumptions, and the ways that a single set of facts can be used to construct completely different conclusions.
The first is that the well-known phenomenon of recency bias, where our brains give too much weight to recent events, is distorting our picture of stocks and bonds.
From MarketWatch
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.