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qualitatively
[kwol-i-tey-tiv-lee]
adverb
in a way that has to do with the characteristics, properties, or attributes of someone or something.
This deal has the potential to usher in a qualitatively different relationship, one not of buyer and seller but of coproducers.
The study suggests that brain white matter may be qualitatively altered in schizophrenia.
Other Word Forms
- nonqualitatively adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of qualitatively1
Example Sentences
Verizon reported earnings on Wednesday morning, but what the company had to say qualitatively about its future strategy was perhaps more important than any number.
Tomahawks would provide a qualitatively new capability to attack Russia’s war machine and pressure Moscow to accept a peace deal.
“It would mean an absolutely new, qualitatively new phase of escalation, including between Russia and the United States.”
Only Poland and the Baltic states are backing their public statements about the threat from Russia with qualitatively increased defence spending.
Finchelstein perhaps best summed up the contrasting opinion — namely, that Trump and his time are quantifiably and qualitatively different and worse than Trump in this regard — through his analysis of Vance.
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