An aberration occurring in humans and other vertebrates, albinism is an absence of pigment in the eyes, skin, hair, scales, or feathers caused by a genetic defect. Albino animals rarely survive in the wild because they lack the pigments that normally provide the protective coloration and a screen against the sun’s rays. Humans have long bred certain albino animals, such as rabbits, for their appearance. In humans with total albinism, the affected person has milk-white skin and hair; the iris of the eye appears pink and the pupil is red. Problems with vision are common in albinism. Total albinism occurs in all races in about one in 20,000 persons.
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Lincoln grew up in Harlem, where he was bullied for his albinism.—
Mathew Rodriguez,
Them.,
21 Aug. 2025 Such sightings are extremely rare — one in 30,000 deer are born with albinism, but white deer can also be piebald.—
Voice Of The People,
New York Daily News,
2 Jan. 2026 In its early stages, Levine only knew the book would be another coming-of-age story, about two sisters, one of whom has albinism.—Literary Hub,
15 May 2026 In their native East African country, the United Nations said that people with albinism are mutilated for body parts.—
Stephanie Stahl,
CBS News,
15 Dec. 2025 See All Example Sentences for albinism
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from French albinisme, from albinos (noun and adjective) "albino" (borrowed from Spanish) + -isme-ism — more at albino entry 1