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41 espectacular
adj.spectacular.* * *► adjetivo1 spectacular* * *adj.* * *ADJ spectacular* * *adjetivo spectacular* * *= grandiose, phenomenal, spectacular, dramatic.Ex. It was initially intended for use in the classified arrangement of a grandiose index to all recorded human knowledge, a 'universal index'.Ex. Over the last 10 years public archive material has come under increased pressure because of the growing numbers of users and the phenomenal expansion in the range of material.Ex. There were some quite spectacular success stories reported of SLIS exporting their IT talents to the rest of the institution.Ex. This kind of distribution is represented by a curve which shows a hugely lopsided frequency for the majority, then a dramatic drop, dribbling off into a long tail of mostly zeros.----* avance espectacular = quantum leap.* de un modo espectacular = spectacularly.* subida espectacular = steep rise.* * *adjetivo spectacular* * *= grandiose, phenomenal, spectacular, dramatic.Ex: It was initially intended for use in the classified arrangement of a grandiose index to all recorded human knowledge, a 'universal index'.
Ex: Over the last 10 years public archive material has come under increased pressure because of the growing numbers of users and the phenomenal expansion in the range of material.Ex: There were some quite spectacular success stories reported of SLIS exporting their IT talents to the rest of the institution.Ex: This kind of distribution is represented by a curve which shows a hugely lopsided frequency for the majority, then a dramatic drop, dribbling off into a long tail of mostly zeros.* avance espectacular = quantum leap.* de un modo espectacular = spectacularly.* subida espectacular = steep rise.* * *spectacularpaisajes de una espectacular belleza landscapes of spectacular beauty* * *
espectacular adjetivo
spectacular
espectacular adjetivo spectacular
' espectacular' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
aparatosa
- aparatoso
English:
dramatic
- dramatically
- gimmick
- grand finale
- grandiose
- spectacle
- spectacular
- phenomenal
* * *espectacular adjspectacular* * *adj spectacular* * *espectacular adj: spectacular♦ espectacularmente adv* * *espectacular adj spectacular -
42 muy + Adjetivo
(adj.) = extremely + Adjetivo, grossly + Adjetivo, rather + Adjetivo, severely + Adjetivo, tightly + Adjetivo, wildly + Adjetivo, extraordinarily + Adjetivo, incredibly + Adjetivo, ludicrously + Adjetivo, seriously + Adjetivo, disappointingly + Adjetivo, not least + Adjetivo, heavily + Adjetivo, much + Adjetivo, mighty + Adjetivo, prohibitively + Adjetivo, sorely + Adjetivo, supremely + Adjetivo, vastly + Adjetivo, vitally + Adjetivo, immensely + Adjetivo, hugely + Adjetivo, significantly + Adjetivo, most + Adjetivo, impressively + Adjetivo, bloody + AdjetivoEx. Thus, the subject approach is extremely important in the access to information.Ex. It is a well-known fact that they're grossly deficient in identifiying talented minority children, and, for that matter, girls.Ex. If you pause to think of all the form concepts you will soon realize that this policy would result in a massive and uneconomical number of rather unhelpful index entries.Ex. Even an informative title is by nature of a title, succinct, and therefore severely limited in the quantity of information that can be conveyed.Ex. Because index terms must be used as access points, the summarization of document content achieved in indexing documents must be more tightly structured.Ex. Meanwhile the ALA and others are making wildly improbable statements about the supposedly numerous opportunities for library school graduates due to the alleged shortage of librarians.Ex. School classrooms are sometimes extraordinarily badly designed with poor acoustics, ineffective blackout facilities, and notoriously eccentric electrical outlets.Ex. We also know that large catalogs are not only incredibly expensive to maintain, but are increasingly impossible to use.Ex. Perhaps it was a ludicrously inadequate expression of her profound surprise.Ex. The author's manuscript was seriously inadequate in this respect.Ex. For example, searching the databse for 'kidney circulation' without using the thesaurus yields disappointingly small results.Ex. Not least significant as a means of increasing the visibility of recorded knowledge is the progress made in the computerization of indexes, bibliographies etc and of library catalogues.Ex. Library services in the past have been far from neutral, indeed are heavily biased towards the literate middle class who form the bulk of library users.Ex. The control function is, in these cases, not one exercised by the bibliographer but by a political power much superior.Ex. A public library is a mighty good thing.Ex. Libraries can obtain updated cataloguing through special customised services, but at prohibitively high cost.Ex. The article is entitled 'The ISBN: a good tool sorely misused'.Ex. Wood is not only a supremely abundant raw material, but it can also be made into a product which is second only to pure rag paper for appearance, strength, and durability.Ex. But it is quite possible for someone to read the story as a vastly entertaining collection of picaresque adventure written with consummate skill and full of 'colorful' characters.Ex. One cannot study any aspect of the reference process without being made aware just how vitally dependent it is for its success on the librarian's personal qualities.Ex. The young librarian was immensely depressed as she pattered down the hall towards the mail room.Ex. This kind of distribution is represented by a curve which shows a hugely lopsided frequency for the majority, then a dramatic drop, dribbling off into a long tail of mostly zeros.Ex. People use a library significantly less than they say they do.Ex. Most worrying for all retailers is the continuing upward spiral in overheads and specifically in rents and rates.Ex. Therese Lawrence provides an impressively detailed list of categories of material fit for collection by libraries.Ex. I know a few guys that are dustbin men and it is bloody hard work for a average of £6.50 an hour.* * *(adj.) = extremely + Adjetivo, grossly + Adjetivo, rather + Adjetivo, severely + Adjetivo, tightly + Adjetivo, wildly + Adjetivo, extraordinarily + Adjetivo, incredibly + Adjetivo, ludicrously + Adjetivo, seriously + Adjetivo, disappointingly + Adjetivo, not least + Adjetivo, heavily + Adjetivo, much + Adjetivo, mighty + Adjetivo, prohibitively + Adjetivo, sorely + Adjetivo, supremely + Adjetivo, vastly + Adjetivo, vitally + Adjetivo, immensely + Adjetivo, hugely + Adjetivo, significantly + Adjetivo, most + Adjetivo, impressively + Adjetivo, bloody + AdjetivoEx: Thus, the subject approach is extremely important in the access to information.
Ex: It is a well-known fact that they're grossly deficient in identifiying talented minority children, and, for that matter, girls.Ex: If you pause to think of all the form concepts you will soon realize that this policy would result in a massive and uneconomical number of rather unhelpful index entries.Ex: Even an informative title is by nature of a title, succinct, and therefore severely limited in the quantity of information that can be conveyed.Ex: Because index terms must be used as access points, the summarization of document content achieved in indexing documents must be more tightly structured.Ex: Meanwhile the ALA and others are making wildly improbable statements about the supposedly numerous opportunities for library school graduates due to the alleged shortage of librarians.Ex: School classrooms are sometimes extraordinarily badly designed with poor acoustics, ineffective blackout facilities, and notoriously eccentric electrical outlets.Ex: We also know that large catalogs are not only incredibly expensive to maintain, but are increasingly impossible to use.Ex: Perhaps it was a ludicrously inadequate expression of her profound surprise.Ex: The author's manuscript was seriously inadequate in this respect.Ex: For example, searching the databse for 'kidney circulation' without using the thesaurus yields disappointingly small results.Ex: Not least significant as a means of increasing the visibility of recorded knowledge is the progress made in the computerization of indexes, bibliographies etc and of library catalogues.Ex: Library services in the past have been far from neutral, indeed are heavily biased towards the literate middle class who form the bulk of library users.Ex: The control function is, in these cases, not one exercised by the bibliographer but by a political power much superior.Ex: A public library is a mighty good thing.Ex: Libraries can obtain updated cataloguing through special customised services, but at prohibitively high cost.Ex: The article is entitled 'The ISBN: a good tool sorely misused'.Ex: Wood is not only a supremely abundant raw material, but it can also be made into a product which is second only to pure rag paper for appearance, strength, and durability.Ex: But it is quite possible for someone to read the story as a vastly entertaining collection of picaresque adventure written with consummate skill and full of 'colorful' characters.Ex: One cannot study any aspect of the reference process without being made aware just how vitally dependent it is for its success on the librarian's personal qualities.Ex: The young librarian was immensely depressed as she pattered down the hall towards the mail room.Ex: This kind of distribution is represented by a curve which shows a hugely lopsided frequency for the majority, then a dramatic drop, dribbling off into a long tail of mostly zeros.Ex: People use a library significantly less than they say they do.Ex: Most worrying for all retailers is the continuing upward spiral in overheads and specifically in rents and rates.Ex: Therese Lawrence provides an impressively detailed list of categories of material fit for collection by libraries.Ex: I know a few guys that are dustbin men and it is bloody hard work for a average of £6.50 an hour. -
43 radical
adj.radical.f. & m.1 radical, die-hard, diehard, extremist.2 radicle, radical.3 radical, root.m.1 root (grammar & math).2 radical (chemistry).* * *► adjetivo1 radical1 (en gramática, matemática) root, radical* * *1. adj.radical, drastic2. noun mf.* * *1.ADJ SMF radical2. SM1) (Ling) root2) (Mat) square-root sign3) (Quím) radical* * *Iadjetivo radicalIImasculino y femenino1) (Pol) radical2)a) (Mat) rootb) (Ling) radical, root* * *= drastic, radical, deep-seated, dramatic, vowed, hardliner, bigot.Ex. Even when drastic revision is seen to be necessary and accepted, the point in time at which to conduct this extensive review can be difficult to select.Ex. A similar approach to arrangement, but one which is less radical than reader interest arrangement, is to rely upon broad categorisation rather than detailed specification.Ex. Librarians have always had a deep-seated, and often irrational, faith in education -- especially book-centred, information education -- as a panacea for society's ills.Ex. This kind of distribution is represented by a curve which shows a hugely lopsided frequency for the majority, then a dramatic drop, dribbling off into a long tail of mostly zeros.Ex. The archtypical animal rights activist is embodied in Emma Peel, a suicidal grammar school dropout, a vowed fruitarian, & member of the Animal Liberation Front.Ex. Iranians have voted for hardliners just out of spite.Ex. It has become far too easy for charlatans and bigots to harness religion to their own political agenda.----* cambio radical = revulsion, radical change.* cambio radical de postura = about-face.* causa radical, la = radical cause, the.* * *Iadjetivo radicalIImasculino y femenino1) (Pol) radical2)a) (Mat) rootb) (Ling) radical, root* * *= drastic, radical, deep-seated, dramatic, vowed, hardliner, bigot.Ex: Even when drastic revision is seen to be necessary and accepted, the point in time at which to conduct this extensive review can be difficult to select.
Ex: A similar approach to arrangement, but one which is less radical than reader interest arrangement, is to rely upon broad categorisation rather than detailed specification.Ex: Librarians have always had a deep-seated, and often irrational, faith in education -- especially book-centred, information education -- as a panacea for society's ills.Ex: This kind of distribution is represented by a curve which shows a hugely lopsided frequency for the majority, then a dramatic drop, dribbling off into a long tail of mostly zeros.Ex: The archtypical animal rights activist is embodied in Emma Peel, a suicidal grammar school dropout, a vowed fruitarian, & member of the Animal Liberation Front.Ex: Iranians have voted for hardliners just out of spite.Ex: It has become far too easy for charlatans and bigots to harness religion to their own political agenda.* cambio radical = revulsion, radical change.* cambio radical de postura = about-face.* causa radical, la = radical cause, the.* * *A1 ( Pol) radical2 ‹cambio/medida› radical, drasticB ( Bot) radicalA ( Pol) radicalradical de izquierdas left-wing radicalB1 ( Mat) root2 ( Ling) radical, root* * *
radical adjetivo, masculino y femenino
radical
radical
I adjetivo
1 (total, completo) radical: su carácter cambió de un modo radical, he went through a radical character change
un cambio radical, a drastic change
2 (categórico, sin término medio) hizo una crítica radical de la nueva ley, she was scathingly critical of the new law
II adjetivo & mf Pol radical
III m Mat Quím radical
radical libre, free radical
Ling root
' radical' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
decantarse
- giro
- radicalizar
- radicalizarse
- vuelco
- vuelta
English:
drastic
- economic
- extreme
- radical
- shake-up
- sweeping
- about
- line
- out
* * *♦ adj1. [drástico] radical2. [no moderado] radical4. Gram root5. Bot root♦ nmf1. [que no es moderado] radical♦ nm1. Gram root2. Mat square root sign3. Quím radicalradical libre free radical* * *I adj radicalII m/f persona radicalIII m GRAM, MAT root* * *radical adj: radical, extreme♦ radicalmente advradical nmf: radical* * *radical adj n radical -
44 reducirse poco a poco
(v.) = dribble offEx. This kind of distribution is represented by a curve which shows a hugely lopsided frequency for the majority, then a dramatic drop, dribbling off into a long tail of mostly zeros.* * *(v.) = dribble offEx: This kind of distribution is represented by a curve which shows a hugely lopsided frequency for the majority, then a dramatic drop, dribbling off into a long tail of mostly zeros.
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45 torcido
adj.1 twisted, crooked, bent, bending.2 ill-starred.3 crooked, twisted.past part.past participle of spanish verb: torcer.* * *► adjetivo1 (que no es recto) twisted3 (ladeado) slanted, crooked, lopsided4 MEDICINA sprained, strained5 figurado (mente etc) twisted* * *(f. - torcida)adj.* * *1. ADJ1) (=no derecho) [nariz, línea] crooked; (=doblado) [palo, alambre] bentel cuadro está torcido — the picture is not straight, the picture is crooked
2) (=taimado) devious, crooked2.SM (=acto) [de seda] twist* * *- da adjetivo1)a) [ESTAR] ( con respecto a otra cosa) crookedb) ( curvo) benttiene las piernas torcidas — ( para adentro) he is knock-kneed; ( para afuera) he is bowlegged
2) < intenciones> devious, crooked* * *= crooked, askew, skewed-up.Ex. The letters are upright, narrow, and angular, standing on crooked feet, and the ascenders are usually decorated with barbs or thorns; f and p do not normally descend below the base line.Ex. It is evident that the vision of the public library user as a person of catholic taste is a little askew.Ex. Thanks to the skewed-up policies of the state government the state's finances are in doldrums.* * *- da adjetivo1)a) [ESTAR] ( con respecto a otra cosa) crookedb) ( curvo) benttiene las piernas torcidas — ( para adentro) he is knock-kneed; ( para afuera) he is bowlegged
2) < intenciones> devious, crooked* * *= crooked, askew, skewed-up.Ex: The letters are upright, narrow, and angular, standing on crooked feet, and the ascenders are usually decorated with barbs or thorns; f and p do not normally descend below the base line.
Ex: It is evident that the vision of the public library user as a person of catholic taste is a little askew.Ex: Thanks to the skewed-up policies of the state government the state's finances are in doldrums.* * *torcido -daA1 [ ESTAR] (con respecto a otra cosa) crookedle quedó la nariz torcida he was left with a crooked nosetiene la boca torcida he has a twisted mouthllevas la falda torcida your skirt's twisted, your skirt isn't straightel cuadro está torcido the picture isn't straight, the picture is on a slant o is askewla planta creció torcida the plant grew crooked o lopsided2 (curvo) bentun alambre/palo torcido a bent wire/sticktiene la columna torcida she has curvature of the spineB ‹intenciones› devious, crookedel hijo menor le salió torcido his youngest son didn't turn out at all as he had hoped* * *
Del verbo torcer: ( conjugate torcer)
torcido es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
torcer
torcido
torcer ( conjugate torcer) verbo transitivo
1 ‹ cuerpo› to twist;
‹ cabeza› to turn;
2 ‹ esquina› to turn
3 ‹curso/rumbo› to change
verbo intransitivo ( girar) [persona/vehículo] to turn;
[ camino] to bend, curve
torcerse verbo pronominal
1 ‹tobillo/muñeca› to sprain
2 [madera/viga] to warp
torcido◊ -da adjetivo
1 [ESTAR]
llevas la falda torcida your skirt's twisted
tiene las piernas torcidas ( para adentro) he is knock-kneed;
( para afuera) he is bowlegged
2 ‹ intenciones› devious, crooked
torcer
I verbo transitivo
1 (curvar) to bend
2 (retorcer) to twist: me he torcido el tobillo, I've twisted my ankle
3 (tergiversar) to twist
II verbo transitivo & vi (girar) to turn: tuerce a la izquierda, turn left
torcido,-a adj (curvo) bent
1 (retorcido) twisted
2 (un cuadro, la corbata, etc) crooked
' torcido' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
torcer
- torcida
- chueco
English:
bandy
- bent
- crooked
- gnarled
- skew-whiff
- squint
- straighten out
- strained
- twist
- askew
- awry
- cockeyed
- lop
- uneven
* * *torcido, -a adj1. [no derecho] [cuello, cable] twisted;[nariz] bent;llevas la corbata torcida your tie's not straight;ese cuadro está torcido that picture's not straight;la rueda de la bicicleta está torcida the bicycle wheel is bent;te ha salido un nueve torcido that nine has come out a bit crooked;me miró con el gesto torcido she frowned at me2. [doblado] [clavo, alambre] bent3. [retorcido] [intención] twisted;[interpretación] mistaken* * *adj twisted, bent* * *torcido, -da adj1) : twisted, crooked2) : devious* * *torcido adj1. (línea) crooked2. (cuadro, corbata) not straight3. (alambre) bent -
46 una ristra de
= a long tail of, a volley ofEx. This kind of distribution is represented by a curve which shows a hugely lopsided frequency for the majority, then a dramatic drop, dribbling off into a long tail of mostly zeros.Ex. Incredible though it may seem, the youngster didn't fire off a volley of cheerful curses, but silently obeyed.* * *= a long tail of, a volley ofEx: This kind of distribution is represented by a curve which shows a hugely lopsided frequency for the majority, then a dramatic drop, dribbling off into a long tail of mostly zeros.
Ex: Incredible though it may seem, the youngster didn't fire off a volley of cheerful curses, but silently obeyed. -
47 skeiv
adj. crooked, lopsided, slanting, distorted, oblique, queer adj. crooked, askew, bent, wry, lopsided -
48 skjev
* * *adj. crooked, lopsided, slanting, distorted, oblique, queer adj. crooked, askew, bent, wry, lopsided -
49 déjeté
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50 guingois
• de guingoisadverbial phrase( = de travers) askew* * *de guingois degɛ̃gwa locution adverbialeêtre de guingois — [meuble, maison] to be lopsided
* * *ɡɛ̃ɡwade guingois adv
* * *guingois: de guingois loc adv être de guingois [meuble, maison] to be lopsided; aller de guingois to go askew.[gɛ̃gwa]de guingois locution adjectivale————————de guingois locution adverbiale[de travers] -
51 sghembo
crookeddi sghembo crookedly, not in a straight line* * *sghembo agg. oblique, crooked, slant (ing): linee sghembe, oblique lines // (mat.) retta, curva sghemba, skew line, curve; corpo, campo sghembo, skew field // a sghembo, obliquely (o crookedly o slantingly): andare a sghembo, to walk crookedly // tagliato di sghembo, cut on the bias.* * *['zgembo] 1. 2.a o di sghembo — crookedly, on the skew
* * *sghembo/'zgembo/II avverbioa o di sghembo crookedly, on the skew. -
52 schief
\schiefe Absätze worn [down] heels;ein \schiefer Baumstamm a leaning tree trunk; s. a. Ebene, Bahn, Turm2) ( entstellt) distorted;ein völlig \schiefes Bild von etw haben to have a wholly false impression of sth;eine \schiefe Darstellung a distorted account;jdm einen \schiefen Blick zuwerfen to look askance at sb;sich in einer \schiefen Lage befinden to find oneself in an awkward position1) ( schräg) crooked, not straight, lopsided;etw \schief aufhaben/ aufsetzen to not have/put sth on straight, to have/put sth on crooked;etw \schief halten to not hold sth straight, to hold sth crooked;den Kopf \schief halten to have one's head cocked to one side;etw \schief hinstellen to put sth at an awkward angle;die Absätze \schief laufen to wear one's heels down on one side;etw \schief treten to wear sth down on one side;\schief wachsen to grow crooked, to not grow straight;\schief gewickelt sein to be seriously [or very much] mistaken;jdn \schief ansehen to look askance at sb -
53 toispuolinen
yks.nom. toispuolinen; yks.gen. toispuolisen; yks.part. toispuolista; yks.ill. toispuoliseen; mon.gen. toispuolisten toispuolisien; mon.part. toispuolisia; mon.ill. toispuolisiinlopsided (adje)one-sided (adje)unequal (adje)uneven (adje)unilateral (adje)* * *• one-sided• unilateral• unequal• monolateral• lopsided• uneven -
54 кособочиться
несовер. - кособочиться; совер. - скособочиться; разг.
be lopsided* * *кособочиться; скособочиться be lopsided -
55 koślaw|y
adj. 1. (krzywy) [buty] misshapen; [obcasy] lopsided, crooked; [litery] crooked, lopsided 2. pot. (nieudolny) [język, mowa, styl, polszczyzna] sloppy, slovenlyThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > koślaw|y
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56 кособочиться
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57 односторонний и узкий подход к проблеме
Politics: lopsided, slanted, unilateralУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > односторонний и узкий подход к проблеме
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58 дискуссия развивается однобоко
Diplomatic term: our debate is somewhat lopsidedУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > дискуссия развивается однобоко
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59 искривлённый
1) General subject: bowed, cam, contorted, crook, crooked, curvaceous, curved, distorted, gnarled (о дереве), gnarly (о дереве), knurly, lapsided, lopsided, twisted, warped, writhen3) Biology: irregular4) Naval: hogged5) Medicine: loxotic6) Botanical term: contortuplicate, epinastic (о растении)7) Engineering: wry8) Automobile industry: non-lineal10) Textile: hooked11) Oil: flexural12) Drilling: canted14) Taboo: hell-west-and-crooked -
60 искривленный
1) General subject: bowed, cam, contorted, crook, crooked, curvaceous, curved, distorted, gnarled (о дереве), gnarly (о дереве), knurly, lapsided, lopsided, twisted, warped, writhen3) Biology: irregular4) Naval: hogged5) Medicine: loxotic6) Botanical term: contortuplicate, epinastic (о растении)7) Engineering: wry8) Automobile industry: non-lineal10) Textile: hooked11) Oil: flexural12) Drilling: canted14) Taboo: hell-west-and-crooked
См. также в других словарях:
Lopsided — Lop sid ed, a. [Lop + side. Cf. {Lobsided}.] 1. Leaning to one side because of some defect of structure; as, a lopsided ship. Marryat. [1913 Webster] 2. Unbalanced; poorly proportioned; having much more on one side than the other; also used… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
lopsided victory — lop sid ed victory, n. A victory in a contest in which one side defeats the other overwhelmingly; in sports, meaning one side scores much more than the other; in war, meaning one side has many more casualties than the other. [PJC] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
lopsided — also lop sided, 1711, originally lapsided, first used of ships; from LOP (Cf. lop) (v.2) + SIDE (Cf. side) (n.). Related: Lopsidedly; lopsidedness … Etymology dictionary
lopsided — [adj] leaning, falling to one side; larger on one side askew, asymmetrical, awry, cockeyed, crooked, disproportional, disproportionate, inclinatory, irregular, nonsymmetrical, off balance, one sided, out of shape, overbalanced, squint, tilting,… … New thesaurus
lopsided — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ with one side lower or smaller than the other. DERIVATIVES lopsidedly adverb lopsidedness noun … English terms dictionary
lopsided — [läp′sīd΄id] adj. 1. noticeably heavier, bigger, or lower on one side; not symmetrical 2. not balanced; uneven lopsidedly adv. lopsidedness n … English World dictionary
lopsided — [[t]lɒ̱psa͟ɪdɪd[/t]] also lop sided 1) ADJ GRADED Something that is lopsided is uneven because one side is lower or heavier than the other. His suit had shoulders that made him look lopsided. ...a friendly, lopsided grin. 2) ADJ GRADED If you say … English dictionary
lopsided — lop|sid|ed [ˌlɔpˈsaıdıd US ˌla:p ] adj [Date: 1700 1800; Origin: lop to hang down loosely ; LOP EARED] 1.) having one side that is lower or heavier than the other ▪ a lopsided grin 2.) unequal or uneven, especially in an unfair way ▪ a lopsided 8 … Dictionary of contemporary English
lopsided — adjective 1 having one side that is lower or heavier than the other: a lopsided grin 2 unequal or uneven in a way that seems unfair: a lopsided ratio of men to women … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
lopsided — adjective Date: 1711 1. leaning to one side 2. lacking in balance, symmetry, or proportion ; disproportionately heavy on one side < a lopsided vote of 99 1 > • lopsidedly adverb • lopsidedness noun … New Collegiate Dictionary
lopsided — adjective /ˈlɒp.saɪ.dəd,ˈlɑp.saɪ.dɪd/ Not even or balanced; not the same on one side as on the other. Carrying a heavy suitcase, he walked with a lopsided gait. See Also: top heavy … Wiktionary