comparatively
IPA: kʌmpˈɛrʌtɪvɫi
adverb
- In a comparative manner.
- When compared to other entities.
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Examples of "comparatively" in Sentences
- The school, comparatively, is pretty well equipped.
- The new thread by Blov, Changing Mexico, comparatively is like day and night.
- Now you will notice that both those countries severed their connection with the past in comparatively modern times.
- I am optimistic enough to hope that before very long we shall have weathered the storm and once more sail in comparatively smooth waters.
- A mix of tungsten and plastic polymer, it's 97 percent as dense as lead and even softer, which results in comparatively loose, long-range patterns.
- I believe that this has led me to cite more articles in comparatively obscure and un-prestigious journals than I used to, and colleagues I've spoken with say the same thing.
- He seems to assume that power hunger, although only dominant in comparatively few people, is a natural instinct that does not have to be explained, like the desire for food.
- Simultaneously with this, we pushed ahead on a similar activity designed to remove nickel from the armament class or a material used in comparatively small amounts in nickel silver, plating, coinage and nickel steel into a metal of universal application.
- I should stress the word "comparatively," because many times those who are more successful within a family are also having their own financial problems, but because they do not exhibit the same signs of struggle as other family members, often they are viewed as "well off."
- Uruguay is a very thinly covered country, entirely settled from Europe in comparatively modern times; a grazing country, not ordinary agriculture, almost all pastoral pursuits, a very prosperous, a very hardy people, a little fond of turning their political differences into fights, but otherwise a stable people, bound to be heard from in an important way as the world grows older.
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