Noun
His salary is in disproportion to what people who have similar jobs earn.
Recent Examples on the Web
Noun
The implications of this enormous disproportion are obvious, given that few governments support more than one or a handful of official languages.—Ross Perlin, Foreign Affairs, 23 Apr. 2024 In a world of absolute equality, there would be no place left for derangements of disproportion.—Elizabeth Barber, Harper's Magazine, 8 Feb. 2024 Just as the point of state neutrality is personal non-neutrality, the point of political egalitarianism is interpersonal disproportion.—Elizabeth Barber, Harper's Magazine, 8 Feb. 2024 The impunity of the American police has been achieved by slow accretion through the decades, and with the tacit understanding that it would be deployed in great disproportion against black people.—Jeannie Suk Gersen, The New Yorker, 8 Aug. 2023 One type of admirer thinks, Why this disproportion, a master catering to young birds?—Doreen St. Félix, The New Yorker, 22 June 2023 The success of the major streaming sites emerges from this disproportion: a one-month subscription costs less than a single movie ticket, and many viewers are willing to accept barely acceptable movies that then come to them without additional charges.—Richard Brody, The New Yorker, 23 Dec. 2020 There’s no contradiction, absurdity, or disproportion in the characters’ desires and strivings, but only in the thickly hostile political environment that opposes and resists them, and that Rockwell reveals in action, as if in a cinematic X-ray.—Richard Brody, The New Yorker, 29 Mar. 2023 In January, the VPC published another study, titled How the Firearms Industry and NRA Market Guns to Communities of Color, that could explain the disproportion found in the number of Latino victims of gun violence with respect to other racial groups.—Laura Daniella Sepulveda, The Arizona Republic, 2 Aug. 2021
These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'disproportion.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
Word History
Etymology
Noun
borrowed from Middle French & New Latin; Middle French, borrowed from New Latin disprōportiōn-, disprōportiō, from Latin dis-dis- + prōportiōn-, prōportiō "analogy, proportion entry 1"
Note:
A derivation that is perhaps just as likely is back-formation from disprōportiōnāre —see disproportionate. The noun disprōportiō was most likely current in later Medieval Latin, despite the lack of textual attestation, given the fifteenth-century instance of disproportion cited in Dictionnaire du moyen français. Compare also disproportion entry 2.
Verb
borrowed from Middle French disproportionner, borrowed from Medieval Latin disprōportiōnāre — more at disproportionate
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