Disproportionate in a sentence as an adjective

This means that there are going to be a disproportionate number of both 1 and 10 votes.

I wish I didn't have to go back to school, it cost time and money disproportionate to what I got out of it.

Most HR departments put a disproportionate amount of emphasis on GPA.

Android is catching up, but iPhone users still spend a disproportionate amount of time using their phone's browser.

There just ends up being a disproportionate amount of stuff about startups, because YC is in the startup business.

One of the major problems, perhaps the largest problem, is that such players have a disproportionate voice with legislators.

So what that YC has a disproportionate amount of women in high places and funds a disproportionate amount of female founders?

The sketch artist could have intentionally drawn the women as slightly disproportionate from reality just to make this piece more polemic.

I'm talking about the subtle fact that, among groups of people, women have the capability to exert a disproportionate influence on the status ordering.

And given the resource discrepancy, the only way of fighting back against companies like this would be to cause vastly disproportionate amounts of damage.

I've said this before, but kudos to the OpenBSD Project for shouldering a disproportionate share of the burden of maintaining core bits of our libre/open infrastructure.

The same ones that won't let you bring your bottle of Coke on an airplane?Governments love to use "larger than life" enemies to justify a disproportionate invasion of liberty.

In fact, I would say that the government probably has a disproportionate number of people who can resist unwarranted self-justifications.

You have to convince people to pay you money for your services, you have to be able to service those customers profitably, and the customers are disproportionately pathological.

Disproportionate definitions

adjective

out of proportion

See also: disproportional

adjective

not proportionate