How to Use multiculturalism in a Sentence
multiculturalism
noun-
Not since the Battle of Versailles had such a showcase of multiculturalism made its mark.
— Killian Wright-Jackson, Essence, 1 Dec. 2023 -
Its attraction is in its multiculturalism and its access to those working in many places and in many time zones.
— Dan Zakai, Forbes, 21 June 2021 -
As with so many other conflicts in American life, from the Scopes trial to the fury against multiculturalism, at its core has been a war over textbooks.
— Adam Hochschild, The New York Review of Books, 16 Nov. 2023 -
And then there’s Bloom’s version, debuting a time when the backlash against multiculturalism is on the rise in America and abroad.
— Washington Post, 17 Mar. 2022 -
France’s in 1998 was a triumph of multiculturalism, with a diverse group of Frenchmen lifting the Jules Rimet trophy.
— Alex Shephard, The New Republic, 18 Nov. 2022 -
Beginning in the early 1970s, in the Vietnam War’s dying days, multiculturalism began to hold sway, at least in the United States.
— Daniel W. Drezner, Foreign Affairs, 13 Apr. 2020 -
The Queen had become a champion of global multiculturalism at home and abroad.
— Tom McTague, The Atlantic, 8 Sep. 2022 -
And yet, she’s left a lasting mark on Germany and the world, making Berlin the fulcrum of Europe with her steady leadership, embrace of multiculturalism, and eye for pragmatism.
— Lenora Chu, The Christian Science Monitor, 20 Sep. 2021 -
Then by the ‘90s, with the rise of diversity and multiculturalism, Asian Americans started popping up and showing up in places.
— Harmeet Kaur, CNN, 1 Mar. 2022 -
There was such potential for multiculturalism in the score.
— San Diego Union-Tribune, 11 Mar. 2022 -
The visual enacts a kind of multiculturalism that is increasingly rare in South Asia.
— Vrinda Jagota, Pitchfork, 24 Oct. 2023 -
But in the early years of multiculturalism it was widely explored and Elso made both a poetic and political thing of it.
— Holland Cotter, New York Times, 26 Dec. 2022 -
Produced and directed by Razi Jafri and Justin Feltman, the documentary explores daily life and multiculturalism from the prism of the city's 2017 election.
— Julie Hinds, Detroit Free Press, 25 May 2021 -
O’Rourke’s message throughout his campaigns was to talk about the border as the place where millions of people live and prosper, bound by a century-old common culture, and where the future of multiculturalism lies.
— Dallas News, 9 Nov. 2022 -
As a resident artist with Teachers & Writers in the Bronx, I was taught how to craft curriculums around inclusivity and multiculturalism, and how to avoid racial bias in my lessons, even as a light-skinned latina.
— Virginia Valenzuela, Wired, 5 Mar. 2021 -
Anton’s vision of the world is a warped one, fetishizing power and disdaining the vulnerable, all suffused with a loathing of multiculturalism.
— Rumaan Alam, The New Republic, 9 Sep. 2020 -
In addition to this, there are the questions of immigration, multiculturalism, globalization, and le wokisme that are also top of the agenda in Britain, the U.S., and elsewhere.
— Tom McTague, The Atlantic, 22 Apr. 2022 -
Other analysts see the law as a ploy to marginalize the kind of multiculturalism promoted in the European Union – and to ghettoize Russian-speaking Ukrainians.
— Mansur Mirovalev, The Christian Science Monitor, 17 Aug. 2021 -
Did the Jews voluntarily erect a version of it in an eighth-century homage to multiculturalism?
— Rich Lowry, National Review, 29 Oct. 2023 -
The irony is that France’s team itself is a reflection of a multiculturalism that makes the French establishment uncomfortable.
— Ishaan Tharoor, Washington Post, 10 Dec. 2022 -
But Hollywood has kind of put a veil on multiculturalism for themselves — unable to see what really is in society.
— Lexy Perez, The Hollywood Reporter, 9 July 2022 -
And yet the Rushdie affair prefigured other historical trends: struggles over multiculturalism and the boundaries of free speech; the rise of radical Islam and the reaction to it.
— David Remnick, The New Yorker, 6 Feb. 2023 -
The political forefather of this vision is probably Pat Buchanan, who inveighed against free trade and multiculturalism in the 1990s.
— Simon Van Zuylen-Wood, Anchorage Daily News, 9 Jan. 2022 -
Some in France also see this rigid secularism as unequal to the challenges of multiculturalism and migration.
— Ahmet T. Kuru, The Conversation, 20 Oct. 2020 -
Trudeau championed Canadian multiculturalism and the plight of refugees, spoke out on the threat of climate change and proudly celebrated his feminism.
— Washington Post, 20 Sep. 2021 -
When the idea of multiculturalism emerged years ago, many saw it as a step toward extending the original American idea of openness to the new wave of non-European immigrants arriving from Asia and elsewhere.
— Daniel Henninger, WSJ, 16 Dec. 2020 -
Gisleson changed the skin color of several of Mucha’s women to reflect New Orleans’ multiculturalism.
— Doug MacCash | Staff Writer, NOLA.com, 1 Feb. 2021 -
First, in a world where most people praise multiculturalism and diversity there seems to be a tendency to blanch and recoil when faced with genuine divergence of viewpoint and variance of behavior.
— Razib Khan, Discover Magazine, 21 Apr. 2011 -
The mother-of-one from western Sydney — the city's hub of multiculturalism — also hears additional comments from the public that have racial connotations.
— Alicia Vrajlal, refinery29.com, 14 Nov. 2022 -
A little more than a week before the start of this summer’s European soccer championship, one of Germany’s national broadcasters aired a documentary examining the national team’s history through its multiculturalism.
— Christopher F. Schuetze, New York Times, 14 June 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'multiculturalism.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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