Synonym: relatively. Similar words: relatively, negatively, creatively, tentatively, alternatively, comparable, actively, compulsively. Meaning: [kəm'pærətɪvlɪ] adv. in a relative manner; by comparison to something else.
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91. We're a comparatively wealthy county, but our resources are getting exhausted.
92. People who were comparatively poor would come to Vinoba and offer all their land.
93. But the trauma of even comparatively simple surgery can cause some people to experience short-term problems with memory and logical thought.
94. Paradoxically, the accusations stirring the most indignation have, in money terms, been comparatively small potatoes.
95. A week or two spent in preparation is really a comparatively short time to plan the necessary changes.
96. This is not surprising because there is still comparatively little available evidence from which such explanations can be derived.
96. Wish you can benefit from our online sentence dictionary and make progress day by day!
97. Now when you think of the comparatively small measurement of a single limb, the inch loss is truly amazing.
98. Deaths before the age of 65, so-called premature deaths, are comparatively rare.
99. Yet the number of professed Sisters who have left is comparatively small.
100. The myth that it is comparatively simple and also deeply desirable to have it off in the back seat.
101. Exactly a week later, she unexpectedly came into a comparatively large sum for those days.
102. The full length of unsupported trailing edge on the comparatively deep cone will vibrate at considerable amplitude.
103. Derived from satellite imagery at comparatively low resolution, predicted yields for different crops in different nation states become of commercial value.
104. The significance of these comparatively simple provisions on open enrolment should not be overlooked.
105. This provides a solid foundation for their marriage, which contributes to the comparatively low divorce rate in the religious community.
106. These sources yield particles which initially have comparatively low energies of motion.
107. The fish snaps at these enticingly offered morsels and finds that it is comparatively easy to bite one off.
108. Thirty should be enough now, particularly if the navy can bring itself to build some comparatively cheap diesel submarines as well.
109. But, once again, these complications are comparatively rare, and, these days, fairly easy to treat.
110. This is probably a comparatively rare occurrence for small mammals, but it certainly does occur.
111. The external changes during growth are comparatively slight and consist mainly of an increase in size at each moult.
112. So the concept of retirement is still comparatively new, particularly amongst the poor.
113. Thus, tired of being the poor and comparatively impotent relation, General Synod is now chafing at the bit.
114. They lay comparatively few eggs but look after them carefully, protecting them from predators.
115. Sometimes other devices, such as stand-ins, supplement the comparatively rigid limits of the split screen.
116. The treatment of rhythmical hierarchy is based on the comparatively recent theory of metrical phonology.
117. Soviet capabilities for the long range projection of power in the Third World were comparatively ineffectual.
118. Homosexuality can therefore feel more natural to many men than their comparatively laborious, expensive, and frustrating pursuits of young women.
119. That is a comparatively recent idea in the long span of history.
120. This phenomenon is often regarded as a paradox, although the total amount of resources expended on such rescues is comparatively small.
More similar words: relatively, negatively, creatively, tentatively, alternatively, comparable, actively, compulsively, positively, effectively, collectively, respectively, retroactively, separation, reparation, preparation, imperative, lucrative, narrative, pejorative, cooperative, decorative, administrative, compare, comparison, lively, compartment, by comparison, separate, apparatus.