like-cultured
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English[edit]
Etymology[edit]
From like + culture + -ed. Compare like-minded.
Adjective[edit]
like-cultured (comparative more like-cultured, superlative most like-cultured)
- Sharing the same or similar culture.
- 1997, Alan C. Elms, Uncovering Lives:
- Psychobiography as a still-developing field will not benefit from being divided into preserves where certain subjects are studied only by like-gendered or like-cultured or like-minded psychobiographers.
- 2013, Linda Miller Cleary, Cross-Cultural Research with Integrity:
- If potential participants say "No," or if they say "Yes" and circumvent questions, or then use absence as a mode of resisting the research, the like-cultured member of your team may understand the reasons why.