English
Wikiquote
Etymology
From Middle English injustice, from Old French injustice, from Latin iniustitia. Equivalent to in- + justice. Displaced native Old English unrihtwīsnes.
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /ɪnˈd͡ʒʌs.tɪs/
Noun
injustice (countable and uncountable, plural injustices)
- Absence of justice; unjustice.
- Violation of the rights of another person or people.
Silence in the face of gross injustice, or support for it, or even active involvement therein, comes at a price.
1971, Lyndon Johnson, The Vantage Point[1], Holt, Reinhart & Winston, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 39:I was not just the President of Southern Americans or white Americans. I was the President of all Americans. I believed that a huge injustice had been perpetrated for hundreds of years on every black man, woman, and child in the United States. I did not think that our nation could endure much longer as a viable democracy if that injustice were allowed to continue.
2024 September 11, Richard Brody, ““Winner” Takes Political Comedy Seriously”, in The New Yorker[2]:The movie delivers a critical and analytical 'unfolding of the circumstances of Reality [Winner]’s life, starting with her childhood in Texas, in order to reveal her sense of deceptions and injustices that pass largely unchallenged in everyday American life.
- Unfairness; the state of not being fair or just.
2011 October 1, Phil McNulty, “Everton 0 - 2 Liverpool”, in BBC Sport[3]:The game was engulfed in controversy when Rodwell appeared to win the ball cleanly in a midfield challenge with Suarez. The tackle drew an angry response from Liverpool's players- Lucas in particular as Suarez writhed in agony - but it was an obvious injustice when the England Under-21 midfielder was shown the red card.
Usage notes
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
absence of justice
- Arabic: ظُلْم (ar) m (ẓulm), جَوْر (ar) (jawr)
- Armenian: անարդարություն (hy) (anardarutʻyun)
- Aromanian: nidriptati f, adichii f, strãmbãtati f
- Asturian: inxusticia f
- Belarusian: несправядлі́васць f (njespravjadlívascʹ), бяспра́ўе n (bjaspráŭje), беззако́нне n (bjezzakónnje)
- Bulgarian: несправедли́вост (bg) f (nespravedlívost), беззако́ние (bg) n (bezzakónie)
- Catalan: injustícia f
- Cebuano: inhustisya
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 不平 (zh) (bùpíng), 不公平 (zh) (bùgōngpíng)
- Czech: bezpráví (cs) n
- Danish: uretfærdighed c
- Dutch: onrecht (nl) n, onrechtvaardigheid (nl) f
- Finnish: epäoikeudenmukaisuus (fi), vääryys (fi)
- French: injustice (fr) f
- Galician: inxustiza (gl) f
- Georgian: უსამართლობა (usamartloba)
- German: Unrecht (de) n
- Greek: αδικία (el) f (adikía)
- Ancient: ἀδικία f (adikía)
- Haitian Creole: abi
- Hindi: अन्याय (hi) m (anyāy)
- Hungarian: igazságtalanság (hu)
- Italian: ingiustizia (it) f
- Japanese: 不正 (ja) (ふせい, fusei), 不公平 (ja) (ふこうへい, fukōhei)
- Korean: 부정(不正) (ko) (bujeong), 불공평(不公平) (ko) (bulgongpyeong)
- Latin: iniūria f
- Macedonian: неправда f (nepravda)
- Manx: aggair m
- Marathi: अन्याय (mr) m (anyāy)
- Ngazidja Comorian: udhulumifu class 11
- Old English: unrihtwīsnes f
- Ottoman Turkish: عدالتسزلك (ʼadaletsizlik)
- Persian: ظُلم (fa) (zolm), بیعِدالَتی (fa) (bi-e'dâlati), بیاِنصافی (bi-ensâfi)
- Polish: niesprawiedliwość (pl) f
- Portuguese: injustiça (pt) f
- Romanian: nedreptate (ro) f, injustiție (ro) f, strâmbătate (ro) f (archaic, popular)
- Russian: несправедли́вость (ru) f (nespravedlívostʹ), беспра́вие (ru) n (besprávije), беззако́ние (ru) n (bezzakónije)
- Scottish Gaelic: eucoir
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Roman: бѐспра̄вље n, беза́коње n, нѐпра̄вда f
- Roman: bèsprāvlje (sh) n, bezákonje (sh) n, nèprāvda (sh) f
- Slovak: bezprávie n
- Slovene: krivica f
- Spanish: injusticia (es) f
- Swahili: dhuluma (sw)
- Swedish: orättvisa (sv) c
- Tagalog: labag sa katarungan
- Thai: ความไม่เป็นธรรม (kwaam-mâi-bpen-tam)
- Turkish: adaletsizlik (tr)
- Ukrainian: несправедли́вість f (nespravedlývistʹ), безпра́в'я (uk) n (bezprávʺja), беззако́ння (uk) n (bezzakónnja)
- Vietnamese: sự bất công (vi)
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violation of the rights of another
- Arabic: ظُلْم (ar) m (ẓulm), جَوْر (ar) m (jawr)
- Asturian: inxusticia f
- Belarusian: несправядлі́васць f (njespravjadlívascʹ)
- Bulgarian: несправедли́вост (bg) f (nespravedlívost)
- Catalan: injustícia f
- Cebuano: inhustisya
- Czech: nespravedlnost (cs) f
- Danish: uretfærdighed c
- Finnish: epäoikeudenmukaisuus (fi), vääryys (fi)
- French: injustice (fr) f
- Galician: inxustiza (gl) f
- German: Ungerechtigkeit (de) f
- Greek: αδικία (el) f (adikía)
- Ancient: ἀδικία f (adikía)
- Hindi: अन्याय (hi) m (anyāy), अधर्म (hi) m (adharm)
- Hungarian: igazságtalanság (hu)
- Italian: ingiustizia (it) f
- Macedonian: неправда f (nepravda)
- Manx: aggair m
- Marathi: अन्याय (mr) m (anyāy)
- Old English: unrihtwīsnes f
- Ottoman Turkish: ظلم (zulm, zulüm)
- Polish: niesprawiedliwość (pl) f
- Portuguese: injustiça (pt) f
- Russian: несправедли́вость (ru) f (nespravedlívostʹ)
- Scottish Gaelic: eucoir f
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: нѐпра̄вда f, кри̑вда f
- Roman: nèprāvda (sh) f, krȋvda (sh) f
- Slovak: nespravodlivosť n, krivda f
- Slovene: krivica f, nepravičnost f
- Spanish: injusticia (es) f
- Swahili: dhuluma (sw)
- Swedish: oförrätt (sv) c, orättvisa (sv) c
- Turkish: haksızlık (tr), adaletsizlik (tr)
- Ukrainian: несправедли́вість f (nespravedlývistʹ)
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French
Wikiquote fr
Etymology
Inherited from Old French, borrowed from Latin injūstitia, from iniustus (“unjust”).
Pronunciation
Noun
injustice f (plural injustices)
- injustice
Further reading
Portuguese
Verb
injustice
- inflection of injustiçar:
- first/third-person singular present subjunctive
- third-person singular imperative