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The Collaborative International Dictionary
comparative philology

Comparative \Com*par"a*tive\, a. [L. comparativus: cf. F. comparatif.]

  1. Of or pertaining to comparison. ``The comparative faculty.''
    --Glanvill.

  2. Proceeding from, or by the method of, comparison; as, the comparative sciences; the comparative anatomy.

  3. Estimated by comparison; relative; not positive or absolute, as compared with another thing or state.

    The recurrence of comparative warmth and cold.
    --Whewell.

    The bubble, by reason of its comparative levity to the fluid that incloses it, would necessarily ascend to the top.
    --Bentley.

  4. (Gram.) Expressing a degree greater or less than the positive degree of the quality denoted by an adjective or adverb. The comparative degree is formed from the positive by the use of -er, more, or less; as, brighter, more bright, or less bright.

    Comparative sciences, those which are based on a comprehensive comparison of the range of objects or facts in any branch or department, and which aim to study out and treat of the fundamental laws or systems of relation pervading them; as, comparative anatomy, comparative physiology, comparative philology.

Usage examples of "comparative philology".

And yet the former history continues to be studied side by side with the laws of statistics, geography, political economy, comparative philology, and geology, which directly contradict its assumptions.

However he had achieved a pure alpha, a practically faultless paper, in his special subject, Comparative Philology.