inclusivity

noun
/ˌɪŋkluːˈsɪvɪti/

Etymology

Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *h₁én Proto-Italic *en Proto-Italic *en- Latin in- Proto-Indo-European *kleh₂w-der. Proto-Italic *klaudō Latin claudō Latin inclūdō Latin inclūsus Proto-Indo-European *-wós Proto-Indo-European *-iHwósder. Latin -īvus Medieval Latin inclūsīvusder. Middle French inclusifder. English inclusive Proto-Indo-European *-teh₂ Proto-Indo-European *-ts Proto-Indo-European *-teh₂ts Latin -itāsder. Old French -itebor. Middle English -ite English -ity English inclusivity From inclusive + -ity, modeled after exclusivity, 1920s, but in more common usage only since the late 1980s.

  1. derived from -itebor
  2. derived from inclusifder

Definitions

  1. The quality of being inclusive

    The quality of being inclusive; inclusiveness.

    • Corporate citizenship is about employee and stakeholder inclusivity. Stakeholder inclusion requires a long-term, and continuous, relationship to be […]
    • Modern states have ordered and arranged their racial inclusivities on the necessity of racist exclusivities.
    • These are the terms on which Gandhi gives birth to Hindu inclusivity. It is worth pausing to distinguish Hindu inclusivity from Christian inclusivity.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for inclusivity. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA