Anything 'Anything' (one word) is a pronoun that means a thing of any kind (i.e., a thing, no matter what it is). Examples: Positive anything is better than negative nothing. (Author Elbert Hubbard) When the sun is shining, I can do anything; no mountain is too high. (Athlete Wilma Rudolph) A person who never made a mistake never tried anything. The latest tweets from @VSk1Ng.
(1) Diagnosis, care, or treatment of an existing health condition of, or preventive care for, an employee or an employee’s family member. (2) For an employee who is a victim of domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking, the purposes described in subdivision (c) of Labor Code Section 230 and subdivision (a) of Section 230.1. Files to compare can either be selected via the Finder or by entering directly the path in the corresponding entry line. Specifics of the two files are then listed in a split window where the differences are high-lighted. Compare Anything 1.0 requires macOS 10.10 or later and costs $0.99.
Synonyms
relatively
adverbin comparison with someone or something similar
whereas
conjunctionused for comparing two things, people, situations etc and showing that there is an importantdifference between them
compared with/to
phraseused for talking about the ways in which two things are different, or about the ways in which something has changed
relatively speaking
phraseused for saying that something is true when you compare it with other similarthings
by/in contrast
phraseused when you are comparing two things or people and saying that the second one is very different from the first
next to
phrasewhen compared to someone or something
the... the...
phraseused with ‘more’, ‘less’, and other comparatives for showing that when an amount, activity, feeling, or quality increases or is reduced, it causes something else to increase or be reduced at the same time
seen against something
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phraseconsidered in relation to something
relative
adjectivehaving a particularquality when compared with something else
against
prepositionused for comparing one thing or amount with another
all-time
adjectiveused for comparing someone or something with all the other people or things of the same type that have ever existed
alongside
adverbused for showing that you are comparing one person or thing with another
any person/thing you care to name/mention
phraseanyone or anything at all, usedespecially in comparisons
as
adverbused for comparing one person, thing, or situation with another
as someone/something goes
phrasewhen you consider what other people or things of the same type are like
beside
prepositionused for comparing two people or things
the biggest/best etc of its/their kind
phraseused to say that one thing is bigger, better etc than other similarthings
by comparison (with)
phraseused for talking about the ways in which two people or things are different
even
adverbused for emphasizing that although something is big, good, bad etc, something else is bigger, better, worse etc
far
adjectiveused for emphasizing a difference when you are making a comparison
half/twice etc as much again
phraseused for comparing two amounts and saying how much more one amount is than the other
in comparison
phraseused for talking about the ways in which two people or things are different
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in contradistinction to something
phraseused for showingdifferences between two things by comparing them
it’s one thing to..., it’s another/a different thing to...
phraseused for comparing two things when the second is much more important, serious, difficult etc than the first
just as... so (too)
phraseused for showing that there is a connection between two situations or actions
most
adverbused for saying that someone or something has more of a particularquality than any other person or thing
mutatis mutandis
adverbformalused in comparisons to say that you have takenaccount of the differences in two similarcases or situations
next to
phraseused for showing that you are not including the person or thing that is really the best, biggest, worst etc when you are making a comparison
over against
phraseused when you are comparing two things or ideas and emphasizing the difference
people like someone/like that
phraseused for comparingpersons with the same qualities or in the same situation
rank
verbto be good, bad, important, unimportant etc compared with other similarpeople or things
versus
prepositionused for stating that two things are being compared in order to show that they are different or that one is better than the other
vis-à-vis
prepositionformalcompared to or relating to someone or something
where
adverbused when comparing two people, things, actions etc and showing how they are different
while
conjunctionused when comparingthings, situations, or people and showing how they are different
yet
adverbused for emphasizing that someone or something is even bigger, better, worse, more etc than someone or something else