Multicultural

//ˌmʌltiˈkʌlt͡ʃəɹəl//

"Multicultural" in a Sentence (14 examples)

We now live in a multicultural world.

The biggest problem with immigration is its multicultural character. The trouble is not that workers migrate when necessary, but the insurmountable cultural gap that separates them from the host societies. Without going any further, Muslim immigration in Europe is a good example.

Having been raised in multilingual and multicultural environments, languages are definitely her thing.

We have a very multicultural mosque.

Australia is one of the most multicultural places on Earth.

Canada is one of the most multicultural places on Earth.

This shows that we're the most multicultural country in the world.

It is the 15th of March of 2015, at a pizzeria on Lulu Island. Adil the Kazakh and I discuss the multilingual and multicultural landscape of South Asia, centuries ago, when there were many kingdoms in the region. Farsi was an elitist language, he says. His Kazakh is a Turkic language in Central Asia. I dutifully and gleefully inform him about PIE, Proto-Indo-European, the ancestral language of many Caucasoids today. The origin in theory is Southern Russia near the Black Sea, more than 6000 years ago. PIE was the great-great-grandfather of languages like Spanish, English, German, Welsh, Hindi, Greek, and many others today. Adil and I discuss about some modern humans who have genes from other species, like the Neanderthals and Denisovans. Scientists know that the brain size of the Neanderthal was bigger than the modern human's.

Canada is a multicultural society.

With the Vietnam War escalating and the Cold War dividing the planet, the late Gene Roddenberry gave TV audiences a glimpse into a positive future: a united planet sending the multicultural crew of the Starship Enterprise on a mission '...to seek out new worlds and civilizations.'

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Near-synonym: polycultural (several or many)

Viewed from the boardrooms of Britain, the market is becoming more multicultural than could have been imagined just five years ago.

The literary landscape of London is as varied as the city itself. According to the 2011 census, 40 percent of residents identified as “Asian, Black, Mixed or Other.” While this is no multi-culti utopia, it is undeniably an intensely multicultural metropolis where more than 300 languages are spoken.

Bedgood, whose father is African American and mother is Caucasian, says he's struggling to deal with such hatred. He grew up in Santa Clarita and says he could not have imagined something like this happening in a quiet community with many multicultural families.

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