equitable
equitable — adjective
1. describing a system, decision, or arrangement that gives the same fair treatment
describing a system, decision, or arrangement that gives the same fair treatment to every person or group involved
Valentina praised the school's equitable grading policy for treating all students fairly.
collocation: equitable grading policy
A more equitable distribution of resources was proposed by the city council.
passive: was proposed / collocation: equitable distribution
The committee aimed to create an equitable system where every voice carried equal weight.
Lakan believes an equitable society must guarantee equal access to education for all children.
Eshe's research focused on equitable hiring practices that give every applicant the same opportunity.
- fair
The everyday alternative; less formal and more widely used across all contexts
- just
Carries a stronger moral or legal weight; emphasises moral rightness rather than procedural fairness
- impartial
Focuses on not favouring any side; often used for judges, referees, or mediators
- unbiased
Emphasises freedom from prejudice; common in research and journalism contexts
- inequitable
Direct opposite; equally formal
- unfair
Everyday opposite; less formal
- biased
Opposite in the sense of favouring one side unfairly
文法句型
equitable + noun (system / distribution / access / solution / society)
be + equitable
用法筆記
More formal than 'fair'. Typically describes broad systems, policies, or frameworks rather than one-off actions. Common in institutional, legal, and academic contexts.