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Перевод: comparatively
[наречие] сравнительно; относительно
Тезаурус:
- Among the mammals they are comparatively rare.
- It would also be comparatively easy - he was getting excited - to sprinkle the thallium on the breast, because Elinor liked breast and he liked leg.
- Until Saturday, Mr Yeltsin and his team had received a comparatively easy ride, thwarting attempts by the Communist-dominated parliament to assert its authority over the executive.
- Even for the materials described here, all the combined scientific efforts have still only made comparatively small inroads into the accumulating list of unsolved questions.
- Partition made comparatively little difference to its position as a market town for Donegal, but inevitably the industrial goods of Derry have to get to the mainland.
- Coinage was invented only comparatively late in human history.
- It was only a cast-iron lump with pushrod valvegear, of course, and with no pretensions to be anything more exotic; even in 1964 we observed that "although this comparatively unsophisticated six-cylinder engine must now be very near the end of its development, it seems to have gained in flexibility and is virtually free from any temperament."
- Among living hunters and gatherers, women may have a comparatively high status as amongst the Mbuti of Africa, or a comparatively low status among most Australian Aborigines
- A surrounding commercial crop where the farmer used a comparatively high sowing rate has less and less podding towards the centre of the field, he points out.
- As a result, we feel very tired after a comparatively short time.
- fourth, a patient on a machine making such a request is a comparatively rare phenomenon.
- But the monthly means from November to February show comparatively little variation and indicate an average winter population in the two Harbours of around 1,200 birds; at least some of the fluctuations in the winter counts must arise from the species' regular habit of feeding outside the Harbours in flooded fields, when these are available.
- But look at the effective freedom which a Chancellor of the Exchequer possesses to make major alterations over a comparatively short span of time in the methods by which a given amount of revenue is raised.
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