Synonym: equal, equivalent, like, look, match, peek, peep. Antonym: peeress. Similar words: peel, speed, speed up, sheer, deer, at full speed, steer, cheer. Meaning: [pɪr /pɪə] n. 1. a person who is of equal standing with another in a group 2. a nobleman (duke or marquis or earl or viscount or baron) who is a member of the British peerage. v. look searchingly.
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91. Blood matted the blond hair, and Lindsey took a deep breath as she leaned closer to peer at the wound.
92. In part, the growth of peer pressure will result from revolutionary changes in pay practices.
93. It was never published in a reputable journal or subjected to the normal peer review.
94. Universities by contrast have a tradition of publishing and disseminating the results of their research for peer approval.
95. The articles amount to premature judgment of an issue that has yet to be subjected to valid peer review.
96. The interviewing panel was civil and included a peer of the realm, a major-General, and a gentleman farmer.
97. The peer group of the extremist-activist typically shares her political opinions.
98. I peer through the magnifier at the still struggling insect.
99. Tutors learn to clarify their thinking(sentencedict.com), and tutees often experience cognitive conflict from being exposed to the views of peer tutors.
100. Climb the hill and enter the echoing fifteenth-century Gothic church to peer through glass panels at the medieval foundations.
101. As the individual adolescent seeks to grow more independent of the family, peer groups and friends become important points of reference.
102. This form of game-playing begins with praise of a peer, and ends with negative feedback on that peer.
103. The peer group makes decisions in a democratic way, with all owners having a say in the final decision.
104. He expected you to have excellent peer relationships and to help people who depend upon you.
105. A disturbing tendency is that some adolescent work-inhibited students narrow their peer relationships to others who also do poorly in school.
106. Until his party's death, a hereditary peer, Lord Milford, was the sole Communist in parliament.
107. The view is worth every tortured moment of discomfort it takes to hunker down, scrunch up, and peer out.
107. Wish you can benefit from our online sentence dictionary and make progress day by day!
108. Cosmopolitans were defined as showing higher levels of commitment to specialized skills and professional peer group judgement than to the employing organization.
109. He loved catching bugs in jars and would peer in through the glass, mesmerized, to watch them scurry about.
110. In academic research we submit our findings to rigorous peer review.
111. The authors also say that peer review is ineffective as a mechanism for restructuring scientific activity.
112. When they landed Paul crept forward to peer out into the grassland from behind a tree.
113. Where affection is the preserve of family and friends, status is more the preserve of the wider peer group or community.
114. He saw a child's head peer round the wing of the comfortable chair, the child from last night.
115. A peer review would require no more than a scan of the vast international medical literature.
116. A system of peer review was also introduced to make qualitative judgments about teaching abilities.
117. However, unsophisticated people should not let peer pressure push them into a fad.
118. Fish tucked into crevices peer out, while crabs scavenge over the reef and probe soft corals for food.
119. Rather, the programs will use school-based education programs, family members and peer groups.
120. Managers in the computer company found it somewhat easier to establish supportive peer relationships than those in the securities firm.
More similar words: peel, speed, speed up, sheer, deer, at full speed, steer, cheer, pioneer, cheer up, engineer, volunteer, pioneering, engineering.