blacklist
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]blacklist (plural blacklists)
- (law, computing) A list or set of people or entities to be shunned or banned, disallowed or blocked.
- Synonyms: blocklist, denylist
- Antonyms: allowlist, fair list, greylist, whitelist
- Hyponym: no-fly list
- The software included a lengthy blacklist of disreputable websites to block.
Usage notes
[edit]Blocklist and denylist are advocated by some who argue that terms such as blacklist and black mark ought to be deemphasized because they perpetuate a supposed unconscious archetype that blackness equals badness, which might reinforce racial and ethnic biases.
Translations
[edit]list or set of people or entities to be shunned or banned
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Verb
[edit]blacklist (third-person singular simple present blacklists, present participle blacklisting, simple past and past participle blacklisted)
- (transitive) To place on a blacklist; to mark a person or entity as one to be shunned or banned.
- You can blacklist known spammers with that button.
- 2013 August 10, “A new prescription”, in The Economist, volume 408, number 8848:
- As the world's drug habit shows, governments are failing in their quest to monitor every London window-box and Andean hillside for banned plants. But even that Sisyphean task looks easy next to the fight against synthetic drugs. No sooner has a drug been blacklisted than chemists adjust their recipe and start churning out a subtly different one.
Synonyms
[edit]- blackball, send to Coventry; see also Thesaurus:ignore or Thesaurus:boycott
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]to place on a blacklist
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See also
[edit]Anagrams
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