Similar words: writ of certiorari, parity, charity, clarity, polarity, hilarity, vulgarity, disparity. Meaning: ['rerətɪ /'reə-] n. 1. noteworthy scarcity 2. a rarified quality 3. something unusual -- perhaps worthy of collecting.
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61. Breadwinner wives who are the couple's sole earners are a rarity, wives are typically joint but secondary earners.
62. The attackers drop real ordnance, itself a rarity in the world of the Hollywood invisible bomb.
63. He gave me two crisp new twenty-five-dollar bills, a rarity in themselves and probably worth thousands.
64. Certainly for earlier periods the rarity and high monetary value of items will place them beyond the reach of schools.
65. No one discovers a rarity by chance.
66. This indicates the rarity of such attacks.
67. A thing is valued in proportion to its rarity.
68. Such a hailstorm was a rarity in that region.
69. Because of their relative rarity, they are often missed.
70. He was a rarity among Wall Street lawyers.
71. Maybe some people have not heard of this rarity?
72. Motorized wheelchairs are a rarity here.
73. "Its rarity value is high,[www.Sentencedict.com]" Gibson announced gravely.
74. The value of a piece of antique furniture is mainly determined by age, quality of materials, rarity , intactness of the piece, etc.
75. These wild Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) are a rarity, as most Atlantic salmon today spend their time on fish farms.
76. The Geneva sealed movement adopts horizontal coupling, a rarity in self - winding chronograph movement.
77. Community characteristics reflected from the industrial structure, space pattern and social life, is just the rarity of social and structural resource in deeper sense.
78. Sound - The use of the eyes is very common in iconography. here are the ears - a great rarity.
79. The inherent factors that decide its multiplication are the features as fission , function inconstancy and rarity.
80. Although forced labor movement like slave labor and indentured labor has been going on for centuries - voluntary labor movement was a rarity.
81. Charges relating to collusion on Wall Street have been a rarity because of the difficulty of proving that firms intentionally sought to act together and acted nefariously.
82. Kenner's original die-cast TIE bomber, one of the few toy incarnations of the Imperial fighter, is eagerly sought by collectors for its rarity.
83. Lemology has certain features of seasonal and regional happening and some diseases rarity and its infectious feature, which make students difficult in observing patients clinical physical features.
84. The exhibition sets choice pieces from the Gilman Collection, acquired by the Met in 2005, alongside other works to emphasize the rarity, quality, and sheer beauty of the museum's holdings.
85. Through design and the precision of setting, diamond jewelry radiates a natural brilliance, enhanced by its rarity, durability and preciousness.
86. When you factor out the amount of time spent thinking through complex and unfamiliar concepts—a rarity when people read for pleasure—reading is an appallingly mechanical process.
87. It was just another sudden unexplained rarity of the war.
88. The rarity value of the Games to broadcasters has enhanced its actual value.
89. The round-backed armchair is a rarity in the antique traditional furniture of our country.
90. To mark its rarity , each Crown Jewel piano has , as a final touch, a special medallion.
More similar words: writ of certiorari, parity, charity, clarity, polarity, hilarity, vulgarity, disparity, similarity, regularity, popularity, insularity, solidarity, familiarity, dissimilarity, complementarity, agrarian, terrarium, librarian, temporarily, marital, baritone, maritime, samaritan, maritimes, arithmetic, charitable, apparition, purity, asperity.