Glossary entry

English term or phrase:

Exclusion

English answer:

shutting out from consideration, privilege, etc.

Added to glossary by Yasutomo Kanazawa
Mar 27, 2023 13:59
1 yr ago
35 viewers *
English term

Exclusion

Non-PRO English Social Sciences Social Science, Sociology, Ethics, etc.
Reduce exclusion and poverty.
References
see
Change log

Mar 27, 2023 19:02: Jennifer Levey changed "Level" from "PRO" to "Non-PRO"

Apr 5, 2023 09:14: Yasutomo Kanazawa Created KOG entry

Votes to reclassify question as PRO/non-PRO:

Non-PRO (3): Yvonne Gallagher, Christopher Schröder, Jennifer Levey

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Responses

+1
13 mins
Selected

shutting out from consideration, privilege, etc.

https://www.dictionary.com/browse/exclude

Employees and their relatives were excluded from participation in the contest.

With no information other than the above sentence, I would say that exclusion here is used to shutting out people or not giving the right to do something.
So the sentence means to reduce shutting out people or depriving people of rights to participate and poverty.

Peer comment(s):

agree Ruhollah Golmoradi
6 mins
Thanks!
neutral Yvonne Gallagher : Context is social sciences
2 hrs
neutral Daryo : wrong context//clue: "Reduce ... poverty" is hardly the concern of the gambling industry - while they will happily be very "inclusive" in accepting anyone willing to gamble away their money => that would be 2 opposite goals, would turn the ST in nonsense.
2 days 10 hrs
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.

Reference comments

13 mins
Reference:

see

Peer comments on this reference comment:

agree writeaway
21 mins
agree Yvonne Gallagher
2 hrs
agree philgoddard : This is an answer rather than a reference comment.
2 hrs
agree Jennifer Levey
4 hrs
agree Tony M
8 hrs
agree Daryo : Once again, an abbreviated form ("exclusion" instead of the full "social exclusion") easily leading straight into a trap if you don't pay attention to the context.
2 days 10 hrs
Something went wrong...
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