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Crossword clues for slightly

slightly
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
slightly
adverb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a little/slightly unfair (also a bit unfair British Englishspoken)
▪ You’re being slightly unfair on him.
a little/slightly worried (also a bit worried British English)
▪ I was a bit worried about my exams.
a little/somewhat/slightly surprised
▪ He was a little surprised by her request.
be slightly wounded
▪ Two people were shot and slightly wounded.
differ slightly
▪ Prices differ slightly from one shop to another.
it rains slightly/lightly (=a little water comes down)
▪ It’s raining slightly, but we can still go out.
quite/slightly/completely etc absurd
▪ It seems quite absurd to expect anyone to drive for 3 hours just for a 20-minute meeting.
seriously/badly/slightly etc delayed
▪ The flight was badly delayed because of fog.
shake slightly
▪ Adam opened the envelope, his hand shaking slightly.
slightly different
▪ a slightly different way of doing things
slightly exaggerated
▪ Roger spoke with a slightly exaggerated American accent.
slightly inferior (also somewhat inferiorformal)
▪ I always felt slightly inferior to her.
slightly nervous
▪ Looking slightly nervous, Paul began to speak.
slightly overweight/a little overweight (also a bit overweight)
▪ He was tall and slightly overweight.
▪ He’s a bit overweight, not too much.
slightly ridiculous
▪ Andrew felt slightly ridiculous carrying the dog.
slightly (=a little)
▪ Population levels actually began to slightly decrease five years ago.
slightly
▪ The water temperature had risen slightly.
slightly
▪ The cooking time may vary slightly depending on your oven.
slightly/a little embarrassed
▪ Tom looked slightly embarrassed when his name was called out.
slightly/mildly depressed
▪ He was exhausted and mildly depressed.
smile faintly/slightly (=a little)
▪ I saw her smile faintly at the memory.
somewhat/slightly excessive (=a little excessive)
▪ I thought her reaction was somewhat excessive.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
different
▪ On Silver and Knitmaster standard and fine gauge electronics the setting is slightly different.
▪ Each has a slightly different take on aging.
▪ A slightly different principle, which allows solvent flow to take place, forms the basis of the Melab and Knauer models.
▪ A hard disk is usually built into the computer and is a slightly different form of storage.
▪ And it had been known, in slightly different circumstances.
▪ The procedure for testing foods is slightly different for hyperkinetic syndrome.
▪ Ray Clarke, director of the Tucson Urban League, takes a slightly different view of the issue.
high
▪ With hands clasped behind and palms facing inwards, raise the arms 35 times, aiming slightly higher with each count.
▪ Still, the November increase was slightly higher than expected.
▪ However, inter-bank rates are generally slightly higher and certainly more volatile than rates in the traditional market.
▪ They produced stable oxygen levels slightly higher than on Earth.
▪ May I hope, however, that some of your magazine's future escorts might be of a slightly higher intellectual calibre?
▪ The company expects revenues and gross margins in the fourth quarter to be flat to slightly higher than the just-ended quarter.
▪ Although the patients in remission showed a slightly higher absorption of PEGs, this rise was not statistically significant.
▪ He said people earning more than £40,000 or £50,000 could afford slightly higher taxes.
large
▪ In use the banding clamp is adjusted before gluing to a diameter slightly larger than that of the assembled segments.
▪ The fruit is slightly larger than the wild strawberry, and it is very pointed.
▪ Many libraries on a slightly larger scale than this still survive and flourish outside the public library system.
▪ Reservations are recommended, usually for a maximum of five people although slightly larger groups can be accommodated.
▪ This proportion is lower than that in chemistry, and reflects a slightly larger spread of values about the mode in geology.
▪ If you build your jig slightly larger than your posts it will slide up and down more easily.
▪ It was also a slightly larger organisation than that in London, and certainly a more costly one.
▪ History records that neither Cold War superpower was much interested in invading this Balkan backwater, which is slightly larger than Maryland.
late
▪ He was also seen on the same Monday slightly later standing at Crown Point, Martlesham.
▪ That direct engagement with the space may be compared with a slightly later work by Richard Serra.
▪ The slightly later and opposing tradition is that of the lexicographer as the objective observer and recorder of language.
▪ They occur in deposits slightly later than most afropithecins.
▪ The nose is mutilated; the bust was apparently deliberately buried in late antiquity with a companion piece of slightly later date.
▪ I was slightly late and, you know with lecture theatres, you usually walk in the bottom and everyone's sitting.
▪ The lid does not belong and is slightly later in date.
▪ A coach-house of slightly later vintage served as a double garage.
long
▪ At this stage there would be no harm in leaving the tenons slightly long.
▪ It is slightly longer and more expensive, but is nevertheless a viable alternative should the Qatif alignment be politically unfeasible.
▪ They are slightly longer than half the disk radius.
▪ He sat down on a sofa which he realised was slightly longer than his cubicle in the lodging house.
▪ It took him slightly longer to reach her this time - four, maybe five strides.
▪ You may also need slightly longer for a panel interview.
▪ The pockets and waistband take slightly longer to dry out completely.
▪ Peggy is also willing to take orders for slightly longer bags to fit the Elite plus extensions.
low
▪ The Durava was a considerably smaller caste than the Salagama, and its social status was probably slightly lower.
▪ London shares recovered from deep early losses to end slightly lower.
▪ The effect is that all readings are slightly low.
▪ The Kutchi Rabaris, for example, being a slightly lower sub caste of his own caste, aroused his disapproval.
▪ The ratio was slightly lower than that achieved by the industry before nationalisation, but it was not markedly out of line with other countries.
▪ Fees are slightly lower November through April.
▪ The interim dividend is 2.5p, against 1.75p and earnings were 0.5p higher at 8.2p after a slightly lower tax burden.
▪ When newly formed along mid-oceanic ridges it is hot and thin and it probably has a slightly lower density.
old
▪ Lynx games will appeal to kids of slightly older ages.
▪ She chooses whatever is available, probably a slightly older man with no more money but a steady job.
▪ As a child, she had been dominated by a slightly older brother.
▪ He seemed slightly older than she had first imagined.
▪ In the lowest quartile, the mean age was only slightly older, 74, and 16 percent were men.
▪ Three-floor club patronized by a slightly older, self-consciously stylish, well-off crowd.
▪ And if he examined trends in slightly older age groups, he could throw in Alzheimer's disease.
small
▪ Danske Bank became the largest bank in the Nordic region, with Unibank slightly smaller in terms of overall capital assets.
▪ The new space will be slightly smaller but the variety of merchandise should stay the same.
▪ The ventral interradial areas are also covered by spinelets which are slightly smaller than those of the dorsal side.
▪ This would include babies who are slightly small for gestational age.
▪ That will certainly mean a slightly smaller, lighter car with an engine of less than the present 6.75 litres.
▪ A slightly smaller proportion need shopping help, but only 9 percent receive this type of assistance.
▪ Girls sniff too, although, perhaps a slightly smaller proportion than boys.
▪ You can get away with slightly smaller units of these than of other Goblins.
well
▪ They weren't foolproof but it made Sly feel slightly better to flip it on.
▪ The story is that slightly better eyesight will enable animals to avoid death and find food slightly more effectively.
▪ It looked a scrappy goal, but slightly better once I had seen what really happened on the telly.
▪ The outlook for stocks in 1996 is only slightly better, the exchange chief said.
▪ The next morning Chola seemed to be slightly better but Sigarup, if anything, was worse.
▪ The Minnesota index did slightly better than the broader market.
▪ He emerged fifteen minutes later, as he always did, looking only slightly better than he had when he entered.
▪ The evidence suggests that women are on average slightly better than men at running countries.
■ VERB
fall
▪ Sales of Guinness fell slightly in a national market which shrank by up to 5 percent.
▪ Prices are now falling slightly after stringent budget-deficit cuts.
▪ In fact, employment rose at the New Jersey chains and fell slightly in Pennsylvania.
▪ And the surface should fall slightly to one side to shed rainwater.
▪ It falls slightly short of such classic vintages as 1961 and 1982&038;.
▪ Net cash fell slightly to £2.2m this time from £2.3m last.
▪ After a couple of years' use the charger's output may fall slightly.
feel
▪ Throughout it all, there was an undisguised murmur of conversation in the church and Denis felt slightly sick.
▪ Now he'd organized his life he felt slightly more cheerful, and cheerfulness always made him hungry.
▪ This was so nearly true that she had the grace to feel slightly ashamed of herself.
▪ I felt slightly ashamed that my priority was breakfast, but excused it on the grounds that shock probably induced hunger.
▪ Sara felt slightly sick, but there was no point in wading deeper into the morass.
▪ Rory had felt slightly sorry for his elder brother, then.
▪ He even felt slightly awkward sitting out with her in a public place having coffee.
▪ When he took his hand away still saying nothing, she felt slightly hurt and resentful.
increase
▪ Despite squeezes on capital expenditure in this sector, total sales did increase slightly to £9.3m from £8.3m in 1991.
▪ Urinary bilirubin levels are negative since the level of conjugated bilirubin is normal or only slightly increased. 238.
▪ It may increase slightly but if fertility continues to decline at the present rate that is unlikely.
▪ Museum financial statements show admissions have increased slightly since 1990, and memberships have increased slowly during the same period.
▪ Standard Vitara width of 64ins remains unchanged, but height is increased slightly to 67ins.
▪ Hispanic participation rates increased slightly as well, from 26. 9 percent in 1985 to 34. 4 percent in 1991.
▪ The numbers of both pupils and teachers have increased slightly since 1984 - the first increase since the early 1970s.
▪ Although wheat yields would increase slightly, average grain size decreases.
injure
▪ Fellow guard Andy MacKenzie, 35, was slightly injured.
▪ Accident: Two people were slightly injured in a collision between two vehicles on the A66 west of Bowes at 9.30 yesterday.
▪ A policeman was slightly injured when he was struck by falling stones in the Umbrian town of Sellano.
▪ Only four of the 77 passengers were slightly injured while escaping from the emergency exits but the aircraft was badly damaged.
▪ They were treated for shock, but were said to be only slightly injured.
▪ A 23-year-old supermarket employee was slightly injured when he was hit with a heavy instrument just after noon yesterday.
▪ The friend was injured slightly and was released from the hospital the next day.
look
▪ If anything, he looks slightly younger than Howard now.
▪ I said, nodding to Sally and her husband, Bruno, who was looking slightly exasperated at the interruption.
▪ He stepped back a pace, smiling broadly as he saw the young woman who stood before him, looking slightly surprised.
▪ Fred always looked slightly surprised when he emerged from the hat, and his expression of annoyed bewilderment delighted the children.
▪ He looked slightly embarrassed and did not deny that he had.
▪ The young magistrate did actually look slightly mad.
▪ This made her look slightly ridiculous and McKillop had to fight back a smile.
▪ I sat on his left, and had the impression of looking slightly down at him.
rise
▪ The ground rose slightly, then dipped; after a hundred yards or so a shallow outcrop of rocks hid the house.
▪ They rose slightly to 28 in 1992, dropped to 26 last year and 18 so far this year, he said.
▪ But take away the effect of the new council tax and underlying inflation has risen slightly.
▪ The water temperature had risen slightly, and for a few days we even saw an occasional flying fish.
▪ The road was beginning to rise slightly, an incline that led to a gentle crest.
▪ Full-time employment in December rose slightly to 6. 28 million, from 6. 27 million in November.
▪ Revenue rose slightly to $ 768 million from $ 765. 6 million.
▪ On the next try, however, the plane rose slightly.
seem
▪ They just seemed slightly unwholesome now, like used tissues.
▪ Even to suggest that efforts he made to expand the labor force by increasing the domestic birth rate would seem slightly artful.
▪ It seemed slightly indecent to listen.
▪ If his name seems slightly familiar, perhaps you are a backpacker.
▪ My slight personal acquaintance with the subject of all this discouraging impersonal solemnity seemed slightly ridiculous.
▪ He seemed slightly embarrassed by it all.
▪ He even seemed slightly grateful that I had raised the matter.
▪ When Mark McGwire was 23, he seemed slightly bigger than humans are supposed to get.
vary
▪ Because games may vary slightly in length you may not start at the exact time given.
▪ Because bond strengths may differ along the various crystallographic axes, hardness may also vary slightly in direction.
▪ However, standards do vary slightly, so we give the best rooms to early bookers.
▪ Goods can be varied slightly and repackaged for local markets throughout the world.
▪ The promotion aspects of the marketing mix vary slightly between consumer markets and industrial markets.
▪ The commands a modem understands vary slightly among brands, as do the default settings.
▪ Still more briefly I have attempted to show that instincts vary slightly in a state of Nature.
▪ This consisted of drawing on graph paper ten figures of slightly varying geometric size, made up of squares.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ a slightly different color
▪ Florida has a slightly larger population than Illinois.
▪ He stood for a moment, his body swaying slightly.
▪ Let the cookies cool slightly before removing them from the baking sheet.
▪ Lynn's daughter is only slightly older than mine.
▪ Sean's car is a slightly different colour.
▪ The temperature had risen slightly, but it was still very cold.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ He was also seen on the same Monday slightly later standing at Crown Point, Martlesham.
▪ However, another slightly amended Bill was soon prepared.
▪ In this tape, a partner demonstrates each pose in a slightly more advanced form.
▪ Lunch was slightly less raucous than the evening meal, but still enormously popular with the masses.
▪ She looked red-eyed and white-faced, slightly fearful and anxious.
▪ Some find the high degree of media hype that has surrounded publication slightly worrying.
▪ The right panel dangled from its upper hinge, swaying slightly, its rusted hinge producing a soft, musical squeak.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Slightly

Slightly \Slight"ly\, adv.

  1. In a slight manner.

  2. Slightingly; negligently. [Obs.]
    --Shak.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
slightly

1520s, "slenderly;" 1590s, "in a small degree," from slight (adj.) + -ly (2).

Wiktionary
slightly

adv. 1 slenderly; delicately. 2 To a small extent or degree.

WordNet
slightly
  1. adv. to a small degree or extent; "his arguments were somewhat self-contradictory"; "the children argued because one slice of cake was slightly larger than the other" [syn: somewhat]

  2. in a slim or slender manner; "a slenderly built woman"; "slightly built" [syn: slenderly, slimly]

Usage examples of "slightly".

Even so dressed, James Ludlow managed to look slightly out of place, very like a man who was too refined for life aboard a ship.

Former NATO general Wesley Clark was only slightly more explicit than all the other Democratic candidates for president, saying a woman should be free to abort her baby right up until the moment of birth.

Reuter said, in accented Anglic with the slightly pedantic twist of a CD veteran.

Wool dyes best in a slightly acid bath, and this may be taken advantage of in dyeing the yellows and blues of this group by adding a small quantity of acetic acid.

Alizarines and most of this class of dye-stuffs dye better in a slightly acid bath it is advisable to add a small quantity of acetic acid, say about one pint to every 100 lb.

And I thought the way we met, with the FBI vouching for Nield, was something slightly esoteric, a comedy 276 touch like the Acme Quick Service brothers.

He therefore resolved immediately to acquaint him with the fact which we have above slightly hinted to the reader.

Sheridan had struck up an acquaintanceship with the actor-murderer Giles, a slightly bizarre eventuality which might have odd consequences.

Its leaves are fleshy, with a bitter saline taste, whilst the juice is slightly acrid, but emollient.

Temporary relief may be given by administering one-quarter of a grain of morphine, or ten to twenty drops of chloroform in a teaspoonful of glycerine, slightly diluted, taken in one dose.

It was discovered that they had slightly different adrenal glands than normal persons.

Harding, whom he already knew slightly from meeting him at the aeroplane plant, and Mortlake himself.

A sudden, agonizing fiery ball of pain shot through him, choking his words, making him stagger slightly.

After that, the airman, with a slightly rolling gait, quickly descended the stairs and without looking back strode down the asphalted embankment past the long hospital building.

When the screen readjusted itself, Verduin saw Akers stagger backward slightly, apparently disoriented by what was coming through his helmet.