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Disproportionately   /dˌɪsprəpˈɔrʃənətli/   Listen
Disproportionately

adverb
1.
Out of proportion.  Antonym: proportionately.
2.
To a disproportionate degree.  Antonym: proportionately.






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"Disproportionately" Quotes from Famous Books



... There are in every species biological "sports" and reversions, and there are individuals of this kind among sporting men who are not reached by ordinary social suggestion and stimuli. But granting that what we may call the instinctive interests are disproportionately strong in the sporting class, as compared with, say, the merchant class, yet these instincts are also strongly marked in what may roughly be called the artist class and in spite of a marked psychic ...
— Introduction to the Science of Sociology • Robert E. Park

... and, looking again at the disproportionately small hands of the men about him, corrected his first impression that they were too feminine to be good ...
— The Magnetic North • Elizabeth Robins (C. E. Raimond)

... observed that, from the necessity of the case, the books of the six principal allies against the Teutonic Powers are threefold in number the books of those powers; and that, from choice of their promulgators the books of the Teutonic Powers are also disproportionately less in total volume, owing to the almost entire absence in them of communications between Austria-Hungary and Germany; while the correspondence between their adversaries is presented by these with a fulness which gives the neutral reader the impression that nothing of importance has been ...
— The Story of the Great War, Volume I (of 8) - Introductions; Special Articles; Causes of War; Diplomatic and State Papers • Various

... localities of South and Central America. Boys will like to know the origin of their name. Stilts are called zancos in Spanish, and these flies, a species of mosquito, are called sancudos—more properly spelled zancudos—on account of their very long, slender legs and disproportionately small bodies, which remind one of a very small boy on very high stilts. Flies on stilts is a funny idea, but not more funny than the appearance ...
— Harper's Young People, January 27, 1880 - An Illustrated Weekly • Various

... Rome or were entirely unobserved because they were receiving no complaints behaved still more insolently and involved the Romans even contrary to their own wishes in a war. This proved the saying that even good fortune, when a disproportionately large portion of it falls to the lot of any individuals, becomes the cause of disaster to them; it entices them on to a state of frenzy (since moderation refuses to cohabit with vanity) and ruins their greatest interests. So these Tarentini, too, after rising to an ...
— Dio's Rome, Vol VI. • Cassius Dio


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