disproportionately
1.A disproportionately large head.
2.his benefits were disproportionately generous.
3.Having a disproportionately large number of administrators.
4.Babies often seem to have disproportionately large heads.
5.be close to the earth, or be disproportionately wide.
6.Yet it has already added disproportionately to the brimming pot of hatred.
7.And, once the revolution had occurred, why did the gains accrue so disproportionately to countries in Europe and North America?
8.Immigrants are disproportionately entrepreneurial, determined, and adaptable, and through history they have strengthened the economy of whatever society they join.
9.Such deductions, which are worth hundreds of billions of dollars a year, narrow the tax base and distort behaviour, and their benefits flow disproportionately to the most affluent taxpayers.
10.Democrats complain that the plan which would cut the top rate from 39 to 33 percent would disproportionately benefit the wealthy and unnecessarily squander expected budget surpluses.

