Disadvantage in a sentence as a noun

No, we are not at an advantage because we have women on our team and no, we are not at a disadvantage because we have women on our team.

It requires about 11 months of planning and prep work and the fact she hasn't put that time in already is in no way a bad thing or a disadvantage for her.

Garage start ups created by college drop outs have a competitive disadvantage as it is not the product that counts, but the right, expensive sales people.

Whether you're building on Facebook's API, iOS, or even Amazon AWS...you will always be competing to a disadvantage.

The troubling aspect of Glass is that it introduces an asymmetry that I feel is to my disadvantage: if someone observes me with Glass, access to that observation is potentially unbounded.

While I am sure this guy has faced real disadvantage from some bigoted people, this post is laced with racism against white people and ridiculously over-the-top statements about colonialism and "neoliberal white supremacy".

Disadvantage in a sentence as a verb

* If you ruthlessly constrain the features of a natural language-like programming language, it's possible that you can keep the advantage of human readability and dodge the disadvantage of the "uncanny valley", as `antihero` succinctly put it.

The disadvantage of the other approaches is that you don't think about it, so you feel safer than you are, and you are more likely to make security-compromising mistakes.- When you download an OS X installer package and run it, it can run arbitrary code during the install.

But things like this really bother me: "traditional engineering-driven approach to business, with its emphasis on perfection, longevity, pride in ingenuity and culture of deep-thinking put the country at a competitive disadvantage in the fast-moving new economy".

I think people here tend to assume that being an engineer/programmer means that not only must they treat their code with utmost logic and rationality, but that they should look at life in the same manner - that to be an empathetic and emotional person puts them at some sort of optimizational and productive disadvantage.

More's the pity that most people can't really achieve big results like this; we have to retain ownership of our businesses in order to really live out our principles.-A commenter on Ars, on why no one else fought Soverain to the end:I think the problem from most defendants' perspective is that they can just pass the costs along to their customers without facing any strategic disadvantage.

Disadvantage definitions

noun

the quality of having an inferior or less favorable position

verb

put at a disadvantage; hinder, harm; "This rule clearly disadvantages me"

See also: disfavor disfavour