| 释义 | 
		Definition of biracial in English: biracialadjectivebʌɪˈreɪʃ(ə)lˌbīˈrāSH(ə)l Concerning or containing members of two racial groups. 有关两个种族的;含两个种族的 Example sentencesExamples -  White candidates had to pay attention to them, either seeking their support in order to create biracial coalitions, or ostentatiously snubbing them in an effort to solidify the white vote.
 -  Many Southern Democratic politicians have learned the trick of building biracial coalitions, which is why they aren't extinct.
 -  For example, a biracial church of 100 members would need 50 members of each racial-ethnic group to achieve a diversity score of 1.
 -  It is this massive boom in poultry that is largely responsible for changing the rural South from a biracial, agricultural culture to a globalized entrepot.
 -  Most of all, people in biracial relationships sometimes receive hateful stares and racial slurs from strangers.
 -  A 6-month-old, biracial boy named Michael was their first foster child.
 -  We use the term multiracial to refer to those of all racial mixes, including biracial.
 -  Largely autobiographical, the novel concerns itself with Hannah, a biracial house slave educated by a white couple who lived on the outskirts of the plantation where she was born.
 -  Even with the option of multiple racial choices on the census forms, Wardle suspects the numbers will represent an undercount of the biracial and multiracial population.
 -  Yes, America makes anyone who is even partially black, black, but he seems to have found a black American identity some biracial people never grow completely comfortable with.
 -  This leaves the Tracey character struggling not only with his residual prejudice but also with his fears for his only daughter's future happiness in a biracial marriage in racially charged America.
 -  She claims that out of all her dolls, she feels the strongest affinity for Gabi, the Brazilian-American soccer player, who, like her, is biracial.
 -  Black and white once defined the racial landscape of the American South, but multicultural and multiethnic rather than biracial now describe society in many southern places.
 -  I view this new literary niche as a sort of biracial bunker, where it's safe to express yourself and feel your feelings after years - decades - of struggling to fit in.
 -  The remaining 9% were either Asian, biracial, or multiracial.
 -  Most of my Mom's family was biracial, so I was colorblind.
 -  Du Bois's images of a white-looking biracial girl demonstrate the arbitrary nature of visual racial classification.
 -  Indeed, by 1890, census officials stopped counting mixed-race people as a separate category, and the nation became officially biracial.
 -  But, between 1968 and 1972, approximately 50,000 black and biracial children were adopted into white families.
 -  ‘I thought she was talking about the biracial aspect of my life,’ says Grove.
 
    Definition of biracial in US English: biracialadjectiveˌbīˈrāSH(ə)l Concerning or containing members of two racial groups. 有关两个种族的;含两个种族的 Example sentencesExamples -  Many Southern Democratic politicians have learned the trick of building biracial coalitions, which is why they aren't extinct.
 -  We use the term multiracial to refer to those of all racial mixes, including biracial.
 -  For example, a biracial church of 100 members would need 50 members of each racial-ethnic group to achieve a diversity score of 1.
 -  Black and white once defined the racial landscape of the American South, but multicultural and multiethnic rather than biracial now describe society in many southern places.
 -  It is this massive boom in poultry that is largely responsible for changing the rural South from a biracial, agricultural culture to a globalized entrepot.
 -  ‘I thought she was talking about the biracial aspect of my life,’ says Grove.
 -  A 6-month-old, biracial boy named Michael was their first foster child.
 -  But, between 1968 and 1972, approximately 50,000 black and biracial children were adopted into white families.
 -  Indeed, by 1890, census officials stopped counting mixed-race people as a separate category, and the nation became officially biracial.
 -  Largely autobiographical, the novel concerns itself with Hannah, a biracial house slave educated by a white couple who lived on the outskirts of the plantation where she was born.
 -  Yes, America makes anyone who is even partially black, black, but he seems to have found a black American identity some biracial people never grow completely comfortable with.
 -  She claims that out of all her dolls, she feels the strongest affinity for Gabi, the Brazilian-American soccer player, who, like her, is biracial.
 -  Even with the option of multiple racial choices on the census forms, Wardle suspects the numbers will represent an undercount of the biracial and multiracial population.
 -  Most of all, people in biracial relationships sometimes receive hateful stares and racial slurs from strangers.
 -  This leaves the Tracey character struggling not only with his residual prejudice but also with his fears for his only daughter's future happiness in a biracial marriage in racially charged America.
 -  The remaining 9% were either Asian, biracial, or multiracial.
 -  I view this new literary niche as a sort of biracial bunker, where it's safe to express yourself and feel your feelings after years - decades - of struggling to fit in.
 -  Du Bois's images of a white-looking biracial girl demonstrate the arbitrary nature of visual racial classification.
 -  White candidates had to pay attention to them, either seeking their support in order to create biracial coalitions, or ostentatiously snubbing them in an effort to solidify the white vote.
 -  Most of my Mom's family was biracial, so I was colorblind.
 
     |