Third-person singular present of discriminate; to recognize differences between things or to treat someone unfairly based on prejudice.
From Latin discriminare, from discrimen meaning 'distinction' or 'difference.' The prefix dis- means 'apart' and the root relates to crisis/critical—literally 'to cut apart critically.'
The original Latin meaning was purely about discernment and judgment, but around the 1860s-1880s it began to specifically mean unfair treatment, following social awareness of racial and gender prejudice.
While 'discriminate' originally meant 'to distinguish,' it became increasingly conflated with prejudicial harm from the mid-20th century onward, particularly in civil rights discourse. This semantic shift now carries strong associations with unjust treatment based on protected characteristics.
When discussing fair differentiation, use 'distinguish,' 'differentiate,' or 'discern' to avoid conflation with bias. Reserve 'discriminates' for explicitly discussing prejudicial behavior.
["distinguishes","differentiates","discerns","separates"]
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