Imprejudicate
adj ·Rare ·Advanced level
Definitions
- 1 Without prejudice; impartial. obsolete
"Thus in Law both Civil and Divine: that is onely esteemed a legal testimony, which receives comprobation from the mouths of at least two witnesses; and that not only for prevention of calumny, but assurance against mistake; whereas notwithstanding the solid reason of one man, is as sufficient as the clamor of a whole Nation; and with imprejudicate apprehensions begets as firm a belief as the authority or aggregated testimony of many hundreds."
Antonyms
All antonymsExample
More examples"Thus in Law both Civil and Divine: that is onely esteemed a legal testimony, which receives comprobation from the mouths of at least two witnesses; and that not only for prevention of calumny, but assurance against mistake; whereas notwithstanding the solid reason of one man, is as sufficient as the clamor of a whole Nation; and with imprejudicate apprehensions begets as firm a belief as the authority or aggregated testimony of many hundreds."
Etymology
From im- + prejudicate.
More for "imprejudicate"
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.