Similar words: marginalize, marginal, marginally, marginal land, marginal cost, marginal revenue, margin, margin call. Meaning: ['mɑrdʒɪnəlaɪz /'mɑːd-] v. relegate to a lower or outer edge, as of specific groups of people.
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1. Left-wing dissidents have been emasculated and marginalised.
2. Women are caught in a double bind, marginalised in the community if they are not wives and mothers, under excessive pressure to be perfect if they are.
3. We must not disable or marginalise them in a society that increasingly seems interested only in the successful.
4. But by marginalising its rusticity thus, Emmerdale's producers showed a disregard for what people want from their televisual Yorkshire.
5. Council tenants become more and more marginalised as the better-off tenants are encouraged, by generous discounts, to buy their homes.
6. In so doing, politicians seem intent on marginalising the Beveridge inheritance and reinforcing social divisions.
7. A further cause of marginalising such programmes is the problem of ghetto hours.
8. The area became marginalised, cut off from the hub of business activity across the river.
9. Post-demonstration coverage also marginalised the political content, focusing, instead, on the activities of the violent minority.
10. The question of how to empower those people marginalised through disabilities and learning difficulties is, thus, a central one.
11. Just as American capitalism was able to marginalise oppositional structures at home, so with the running down of public cultures abroad it has been able to penetrate into new markets.
12. Criminology, like crime control, tends to focus on males and marginalise females or render them invisible.
13. Being able to satisfy their need s and fulfilment in this way has help marginalise the need. for religion.
14. Today, these communities have no autonomy but are isolated, marginalised and discriminated against.
15. But most of this growing population is poor and marginalised, even before disaster strikes.
16. Traditional art history would include Bonnard for his technical innovations and largely marginalise Rodchenko for his politics and photography.
17. Over the years, however, the tribes have become increasingly marginalised and their rich cultures and traditions have barely survived.
18. As the Occupy movement gathers critical strength around the globe, so the efforts to marginalise and stigmatise it grow as well.
19. This in turn, will increase the stakes of multi-nationals in India's well being and marginalise sanction regimes.
20. Where friends are concerned, some delays are to be expected but be sure you don't marginalise them in your quest for everything else.
21. That reversed years of British policy towards Europe, which resisted talk of an inner core that might marginalise Britain in vital matters of economic decision-making.
22. He doesn't, of course, want the "gay writer" tag to be turned against him,[sentence dictionary] to be an excuse to marginalise his work.
23. We know breastfeeding is good for women and children, but we also don't want to marginalise women who can't breastfeed for whatever reason.
24. Sports are, by their nature, competitive and not everyone is good at them: "There are people who can be a bit self-conscious and you need to ensure you don't marginalise them."
25. It was once regarded as axiomatic that globalisation would marginalise politics.
More similar words: marginalize, marginal, marginally, marginal land, marginal cost, marginal revenue, margin, margin call, profit margin, margin of error, penalise, finalist, originality, rationalise, institutionalised, discharging, valise, original, realise, originally, vandalise, normalise, moralise, legalise, realised, equalise, aboriginal, socialise, visualise, tantalise.