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Comparison   /kəmpˈɛrəsən/   Listen
noun
Comparison  n.  
1.
The act of comparing; an examination of two or more objects with the view of discovering the resemblances or differences; relative estimate. "As sharp legal practitioners, no class of human beings can bear comparison with them." "The miracles of our Lord and those of the Old Testament afford many interesting points of comparison."
2.
The state of being compared; a relative estimate; also, a state, quality, or relation, admitting of being compared; as, to bring a thing into comparison with another; there is no comparison between them.
3.
That to which, or with which, a thing is compared, as being equal or like; illustration; similitude. "Whereto shall we liken the kingdom of God? Or with what comparison shall we compare it?"
4.
(Gram.) The modification, by inflection or otherwise, which the adjective and adverb undergo to denote degrees of quality or quantity; as, little, less, least, are examples of comparison.
5.
(Rhet.) A figure by which one person or thing is compared to another, or the two are considered with regard to some property or quality, which is common to them both; e.g., the lake sparkled like a jewel.
6.
(Phren.) The faculty of the reflective group which is supposed to perceive resemblances and contrasts.
Beyond comparison, so far superior as to have no likeness, or so as to make comparison needless.
In comparison of, In comparison with, as compared with; in proportion to. (Archaic) "So miserably unpeopled in comparison of what it once was." Comparison of hands (Law), a mode of proving or disproving the genuineness of a signature or writing by comparing it with another proved or admitted to be genuine, in order to ascertain whether both were written by the same person.



verb
Comparison  v. t.  To compare. (Obs.)






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Comparison" Quotes from Famous Books



... brigades, it would still have done its utmost. From the Potomac to the Dan, from the Eastern Shore to the Alleghenies the flame of patriotism burned high and clear. There were skulkers, there were braggarts, there were knaves and fools in Virginia as elsewhere, but by comparison they were not many, and theirs was not the voice that was heard to-day. The mass of the people were very honest, stubbornly convinced, showing to the end a most heroic and devoted ardour. This village was not behindhand. All her young men were going; she had her company, too. She ...
— The Long Roll • Mary Johnston

... smiled a little mirthlessly. The comparison was very slight! Then, at the beginning, at the outset of the Gray Seal's career, the police, it was true, had shown a certain unpleasant anxiety for a closer acquaintanceship, but that was about all. To-day, lashed on and mocked by a virulent ...
— The Further Adventures of Jimmie Dale • Frank L. Packard

... Ragot," wives of two judges, come in person to the record-office to make selections from the spoils of the accused, taking for their wardrobe silver shoe-buckles, laces and fine linen.[33123]—But all that the accused, the imprisoned and fugitives can take with them, amounts to but little in comparison with what they leave at home, that is to say, under sequestration. All the religious or seignorial chateaux and mansions in France are in this plight, along with their furniture, and likewise most of the fine bourgeois ...
— The Origins of Contemporary France, Volume 4 (of 6) - The French Revolution, Volume 3 (of 3) • Hippolyte A. Taine

... excepting only sin; he did not allow the divine in him to hold back the human, but let it run its course and obey its laws, as was proved in His appointed time. Do not wonder then that I have, for all these reasons, made the most Holy Virgin, Mother of God, a great deal younger in comparison with her Son than she is usually represented. To the Son I have allotted His full age." Considerations worthy of any theologian, wonderful perhaps in any one else, but not in Michael Angelo, whom God and Nature have formed not only for his unique ...
— Michael Angelo Buonarroti • Charles Holroyd

... to draw a terrible comparison between these two men—between the husband who had all she had of heart, and the friend whom she now acknowledged to herself—for hypocrisy had fallen away from her—had lived only for her, and for the hours they were able to spend together, during two long years, and yet who had never told ...
— Studies in love and in terror • Marie Belloc Lowndes


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