英:[ˌsʌbˈhju:mən]
美:[sʌbˈhjumən]
英:[ˌsʌbˈhju:mən]
美:[sʌbˈhjumən]
sub·hu·man
suhb hyu mn
adjective
less than human: such as
failing to attain the level (as of morality or intelligence) associated with normal human beings
unsuitable to or unfit for human beings
subhuman living conditions
of or relating to a taxonomic group lower than that of humans
the subhuman primates
noun
a subhuman being
1790年,来自 sub - + human。名词的使用可以追溯到1957年。
The first known use of subhuman was in 1790
subhumanadjective
of or relating to a taxonomic group lower than that of humans
the subhuman primates
1 Even more a part of this notion is the assumption that journalists, reporters, and editors are subhuman and expected to be on the periphery of the human experience.
2 Those in power still have plenty of ways of portraying others as subhuman.
3 Not as superhuman or subhuman; just as human.
4 The implication, of course, was that since we were clearly from Appalachia, then we were most likely similar to that character: the violent, stupid, subhuman products of inbreeding.
5 “Japanese were looked upon as something subhuman and repulsive,” the journalist Ernie Pyle wrote, “the way some people feel about cockroaches or mice.”
6 Either that or I was like Cap’s pet ferret—a subhuman companion, undeserving of attention.
7 Amazingly, nearly every single one of these comments is even worse than his “subhuman mongrel” remark.
8 Tom's answer is in its own strange way a defense of his humanity and intelligence in the face of a culture that regards him as subhuman.
9 "I had to show that Jews don't stink, that they don't have hunched backs, long noses or anything else" branding them as subhuman under the Nazis, she said.
10 Four out of five his children were born to immigrant women, removing all remaining wiggle room that this phrase is anything but an assertion that non-white people are a subhuman taint.
11 The history of immigration policy is filled with moments like these, when a group goes from subhuman to superhuman within a few short years, because of political winds beyond their grasp.
12 “It was subhuman conditions — and then there’s the toll it takes on your mind.”
13 He has become subhuman, a visitor from hell, and the story has served as a safety valve for the nightmare of science run amok, an incantatory form of collective therapeutic release.
14 "The way he treated me - I felt subhuman. I felt completely powerless," he added.
15 On the one hand, Karen was in a state where her quality of life was almost subhuman.
16 Being humans who perform a superhuman -- or perhaps subhuman -- job, directors have advice to give.
17 The committee deemed him unacceptable because of his enthusiastic fascism and vicious anti-Semitism — what one of the members called his “ ‘subhuman’ reaction” to the Holocaust.
18 Derogatory language — where protesters term officers dogs and gangsters, and police call demonstrators subhuman and cockroaches — has become a hallmark of Hong Kong’s protests as clashes have escalated.
19 They had to figure out how to have human conversations with those who are subhuman.
20 The brawl, which Ah Sahm wins handily, is the kind of thing that a nonwhite person fantasizes about after being treated as subhuman—a kick-ass solution to a miasmic attack.
2 低能
weak-headed lunchie lunch chuckle wanting feeble half-baked low-energy imbecile half-assed fatuous subnormal weak-minded dullish simpleminded feebleminded moronity weakness idiot imbecility fatuity moronism be not the full quid
3 似人的
5 堕落的人
6 非人的
7 低于人类的
8 低能的
weak-headed lunchie lunch chuckle wanting feeble half-baked low-energy imbecile half-assed fatuous subnormal weak-minded dullish simpleminded feebleminded
9 非人