Comparative in a sentence as a noun

[3] What's new here is the comparative data from different countries.

157 votes so we can have an amateur North Korea/US comparative studies class.

As long as there is scarcity, comparative advantage matters.

Such focus allows you to gain "comparative advantage" and to easily do things that are difficult for people who don't have your deep experience.

Therefore, they would both benefit from trade given that each of these countries had a comparative benefit or efficiency to offer.

Before anyone replies with comparative excuses or appeals to historical precedence, see this.

Otherwise Google and Facebook will continue to drop the bills and pick off the best teams who eventually get tired of the smaller comparative payoffs that these apps bring in.

Comparative in a sentence as an adjective

It's similar to people's reaction to the comparative threat of keeping their email on Google Mail or some random webmail provider that's likely to lose their mail spool to SQL injection.

You can answer that question by giving a list of comparative advantages without being necessarily biased or inflammatory.

If the citizens vote for a 50% income tax then that is what they should see on their payment stub.> Being from Europe originally and having lived in Silicon Valley now for more than 10 years, I did the math on comparative taxes.

A great deal of formal art education is learning to detach your visual stimulus from the semantic association you would otherwise naturally make...and perhaps reattach it to new semantic associations like "negative space" and "comparative brightness" and "relative white value".

You mentioned California prisons are some of the worst, to my knowledge they are also the most overcrowded?What strikes me in a comparative analysis of the US penal system is not quality of treatment, but the perverse economic incentives promoting hoarding such a large percentage of the population in them.

Because being on the hook for people's backups is not my idea of a fun time, because I'd be directly competing with an Internet buddy who I'd rather see successful, because I have no particular comparative advantage in backups that I don't have in a host of better product categories, because I already run three businesses and enjoy sleeping occasionally, because running services is in fact a heck of a lot harder than posting about them, etc etc.

Comparative definitions

noun

the comparative form of an adjective or adverb; "`faster' is the comparative of the adjective `fast'"; "`less famous' is the comparative degree of the adjective `famous'"; "`more surely' is the comparative of the adverb `surely'"

adjective

relating to or based on or involving comparison; "comparative linguistics"

adjective

estimated by comparison; not absolute or complete; "a relative stranger"

See also: relative