injustice

/ɪnˈd͡ʒʌs.tɪs/
noun 4

Collocations

15
1

(noun.)

ADJ

cruel, grave, great, gross, terrible | perceived | racial, social

VERB + INJUSTICE

experience, suffer

Many workers experience terrible injustice when they are paid less for doing the same job.

regard sth as

Many people regard the unfair punishment as a serious injustice.

cause

The discriminatory hiring practices caused serious injustice to many qualified applicants.

commit, do (sb/yourself)

We shouldn't commit an injustice against people just because they look different from us.

expose

The journalist's investigation helped expose the injustice that victims had suffered for years.

fight against, protest against, speak out against, struggle against, work against

Many activists have spent their lives fighting against injustice in their communities.

correct, remedy

The new law helped remedy years of injustice against migrant workers.

stop

PREP

~ by

The family felt a deep sense of injustice by the court's decision to dismiss their case.

~ to

Denying her the promotion felt like a real injustice to someone so hardworking and talented.

PHRASES

the injustice of it all

He couldn't stop thinking about the injustice of it all after losing his job unfairly.

a sense of injustice, a victim of injustice

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