privileges

forbidden words: privileges

privileges
plural noun

a special right, advantage, or immunity granted or available only to a particular person or group.
“education is a right, not a privilege”

Similar:

  • advantage
  • right
  • benefit
  • prerogative
  • entitlement
  • birthright
  • due
  • concession
  • freedom
  • liberty

something regarded as a special honor.
“I have the privilege of awarding you this scholarship”

Similar:

  • honor
  • pleasure

(especially in a parliamentary context) the right to say or write something without the risk of incurring punishment or legal action for defamation.
noun: absolute privilege;
plural noun: absolute privileges;
noun: parliamentary privilege;
plural noun: parliamentary privileges

“a breach of parliamentary privilege”

the right of a lawyer or official to refuse to divulge confidential information.

historical
a grant to an individual, corporation, or place of special rights or immunities, especially in the form of a franchise or monopoly.

Similar:

  • immunity
  • exemption
  • dispensation

verb formal
3rd person present: privileges

grant a privilege or privileges to.
“English inheritance law privileged the eldest son”

exempt (someone) from a liability or obligation to which others are subject.

from — Google Search. (n.d.-g). 

~ ~

Privileges . . . are the specific benefits or advantages that come with possessing privilege. These can include access to better education, healthcare, job opportunities, and social networks. Privileges can also be more subtle, such as not having to worry about being discriminated against or harassed due to one’s race or gender. Privileges can be both tangible and intangible, and they often work together to reinforce existing power structures and inequalities.

Here is a table summarizing the differences between privilege and privileges:

Privilege

Privileges

A special advantage, right, or immunity granted to a particular group or individual that is not available to everyone else

The specific benefits or advantages that come with possessing privilege

Based on factors such as social status, wealth, race, or gender

Can include access to better education, healthcare, job opportunities, and social networks

Often taken for granted and seen as the norm

Can be both tangible and intangible

It is important to note that privilege is not inherently bad, but it becomes problematic when it is used to maintain or reinforce existing power structures and inequalities. Recognizing and understanding privilege and privileges is crucial in creating a more equitable and just society.

from — Manaher, S. (2023). Privilege vs privileges: How are these words connected? thecontentauthority.com.

~ ~ ~

example sentences: privileges

Thanks to the flaw, the hackers were able to crack the credentials and gain administrative privileges to accounts on Ascension’s Microsoft Active Directory server, which can be harnessed to manage user accounts and applications over a company’s network.
PC Magazine, 11 Sep. 2025

If convicted for the deaths of Michaud and Snyder, each charge carries a possible $100,000 fine, 40 years in prison and the loss of her driving privileges for up to five years.
—Becca Longmire, PEOPLE, 11 Sep. 2025

Israel’s security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, issued a threat to the convoy earlier in September, saying activists will be held in prisons for terrorists and will be denied special privileges, according to media reports.
—Amira El-Fekki‎, MSNBC Newsweek, 10 Sep. 2025

Stay at a vacation rental, the Marsh Harbour Inn, or The Inn at Bald Head Island, which includes club privileges.
—Brandee Gruener, Southern Living, 9 Sep. 2025

Standing privileges let support teams respond fast.
—Jagadeesh Kunda, Forbes.com, 9 Sep. 2025

Sounders staff member Steven Lenhart, who joined the club this season as a mental health advisor, had his credential privileges revoked for the remainder of the 2025 MLS regular season and postseason.
—Michelle Kaufman, Miami Herald, 8 Sep. 2025

The convention was advertised as offering an all-in-one ticket covering both entry and concert access, with flexible in-and-out privileges.
—Staff Report, Twin Cities, 6 Sep. 2025

Both violations can lead to limited driving privileges — or having your license revoked altogether.
—Tanasia Kenney, Charlotte Observer, 5 Sep. 2025

At the same time, the Brotherhood discourages any worldly attachment that privileges one person over another person, or over God.
—Hannah Gold, New Yorker, 29 Aug. 2025

But behind the world’s fastest-growing businesses is a quieter form of leadership—one that privileges operations over oration, systems over showmanship, and execution over ego.
—Brent Gleeson, Forbes.com, 13 Aug. 2025

from — Thesaurus results for PRIVILEGES. (2025). Mirriam-Webster Dictionary


September 19, 2025
Hudson Valley, New York

This is one of the words/ phrases you can’t say in the new Trump Administration. See a comprehensive list at the Forbidden Words Project.

image: steeple © Holly Troy 9.2025


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Holly hails from an illustrious lineage of fortune tellers, yogis, folk healers, troubadours and poets of the fine and mystical arts. Shape-shifting Tantric Siren of the Lunar Mysteries, she surfs the ebbs and flows of the multiverse on the Pure Sound of Creation. Her alchemy is Sacred Folly — revolutionary transformation through Love, deep play, Beauty, and music.

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