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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
imbalance
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
gender
▪ Egalitarian feminist psychologists draw on both feminist and psychological criticisms of gender imbalance among psychologists.
▪ This could be because fewer girls are taught chess, and those who play are put off by the huge gender imbalance.
▪ The gender imbalance is seen by many as the natural order of things, indicating some form of biological superiority for women.
▪ This chapter examines the gender imbalances among psychologists, and analyses egalitarian attempts to rectify them.
▪ The reasons for the current gender imbalance are not fully understood.
▪ How, besides tokenism, do psychological and feminist concepts of the subject affect feminist efforts to correct gender imbalances among psychologists?
▪ This gender imbalance in later life is not a trend which is unique to Great Britain.
trade
▪ There is also the danger that small, local agreements spin out of control as trade imbalances grow among their signatories.
▪ Conversely, suppose the United States was to solve its trade imbalance by imposing import quotas.
▪ This would correct the Motor industry trade imbalance without the need to export one additional unit.
▪ Presto, the gold standard controlled prices and alleviated trade imbalances.
▪ The two leaders were reported to have agreed to remove trade imbalances by 1993.
▪ This trade imbalance may haunt the United States in the future.
▪ On economic issues, they expressed concern over continuing high unemployment, high inflation in some countries, and trade imbalances.
■ VERB
cause
▪ Usually caused by muscle imbalance, but can be aggravated by bad shoes.
▪ A lot of overweight is caused by an imbalance between these.
▪ It is caused by their chemical imbalance, their emotional arrhythmia and their disenchantment with the world.
▪ Typically a woman experiences either postpartum blues, caused by hormonal changes, or postpartum depression, caused by a chemical imbalance.
▪ He suggests that the trigger may cause an imbalance and that the immune system may play a role.
correct
▪ Spiritual healing aims to correct these deep-seated imbalances by strengthening the flow of the life-force and removing any negative forces or imbalances.
▪ This process corrects any respiratory imbalance that might be present in the specimen.
▪ To correct imbalances arising internally within the organism requires the use of a therapy which can counteract such imbalances.
▪ Often, medication is necessary to correct the imbalance and prevent complications.
▪ In order to effect a lasting cure, it is necessary to correct the fundamental imbalance or disharmony.
▪ Choices for correcting the imbalance between public good and private cost consist, basically, of: 1.
▪ It would seem that in this case the remedy had corrected a biochemical imbalance.
▪ The remedies seem to have the power to help harmonize the body's metabolic processes and to correct imbalances in them.
create
▪ Pesticides kill off the beneficial insects as well as the destructive ones creating an imbalance in nature and wasting valuable assets.
▪ By introducing new options, the anytime / anyplace office creates a sense of imbalance.
redress
▪ Saving Sierra Leone is, as much as anything else, about redressing the awful imbalance in life chances the war created.
▪ To redress the imbalance between the photograph and the original he emphasizes the need for more original art in more public places.
▪ Active partnership with the private sector is being sought to redress this imbalance.
▪ I want as well to redress some imbalances in recent academic accounts of the period known as the sixties.
▪ It redresses the imbalance in the existing historical literature of the period, which is heavily weighted in favour of economic and political issues.
▪ On a wider note, authors need to organise themselves to redress the current imbalance of power.
▪ Solving the problem A pressing need in reforming medical education is to redress the imbalance between teaching, research, and administration.
▪ It is hoped that this work may play some small part in redressing this imbalance.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ At the higher levels of management, there's definitely a gender imbalance.
▪ Eighty per cent of our wealth belongs to five per cent of the people, and there's no legislation to counter this imbalance.
▪ the imbalance of power between women and men in nineteenth-century America
▪ The company was ordered to remedy the racial imbalance in its workforce.
▪ The economy is failing because of the great imbalance between imports and exports.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ But the imbalance affects women more directly.
▪ In acid-base disorders, the compensatory changes occur in the component that is not the original cause of the imbalance.
▪ In bringing out the imbalance, therefore, it should appear in progressively lower and more superficial regions of the body.
▪ So often there is an imbalance in the quality of a band's gear.
▪ Some other semiconductor companies, listed on the Big Board, had to stop trading because of order imbalances.
▪ Standard bicarbonate measurement is a technique used to determine the presence of a metabolic acid-base imbalance.
▪ The general public wouldn't be interested in the subtleties of unfair regulations and the clear imbalance of resources.
▪ Usually caused by muscle imbalance, but can be aggravated by bad shoes.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
imbalance

1895, from im- "not" + balance (n.).

Wiktionary
imbalance

n. The property of not being in balance.

WordNet
imbalance
  1. n. a state of disequilibrium (as may occur in cases of inner ear disease) [syn: instability, unbalance] [ant: balance]

  2. (mathematics) a lack of symmetry [syn: asymmetry] [ant: symmetry]

Usage examples of "imbalance".

They must be able to detect a growing imbalance, and I must be the cause.

Mach had told him briefly of the discovery by Stile, his father, that their exchange was causing a dangerous imbalance, so they had to spend more time in their own frames.

Stile noted that the imbalance is abating not, and knew that either the boys had exchanged not, or that other had exchanged.

This matter must be settled, and the imbalance between frames corrected, lest great harm come to all.

Or at least agree to equal time in Proton, so the imbalance can be limited.

Protonite in the science frame generated an imbalance that threatened to tear the fabric that separated them and destroy both.

But if that line ceases to exist, the channel by which you and Mach communicate and exchange places will be gone, and all that you contemplate will end, and my chance to rectify the accumulated imbalance will abort.

I understand it, the frames must either be completely separated, with no interaction between them, or completely overlapped, so that any imbalance corrects instantly.

That imbalance we wish to redress, drawing on, among others, the theorists I just mentioned.

So in the second battle here at the north, like the first at the south, the imbalance between the two fleets was staggering, and Admiral Ozawa knew as day broke on 25 October that he, too, was engaged in a suicide mission.

For him not to have spotted such a gross imbalance would have been like - well, like forgetting to breathe.

That was going to happen even inside the cities she thought, and wondered how that would influence future society, given that there was already an imbalance because of more parents selecting boys rather than girls.

He tried not to shudder, even as the faint images of the grove and the distant forest slipped into his thoughts with the contrast between the balanced forces of the forest, always changing, but always balanced, and the great frozen imbalance beneath him, indeed beneath much of the southern part of the Grass Hills.

The impression of balance seethed even more strongly around them, as did an ugly sense of imbalance that tilted or loomed beyond the forest.

Whatever the reason, the old white mages had used the artificial imbalance between those top two layers as a power source-like an electric current, if you will.