0 in a way that keeps the same relationship between numbers or amounts; as a proportion:
1 when considering an amount of something as a part of a whole:
proportionally less/more/fewer Germany has proportionally more long-term unemployed than rival big economies.
New England has proportionally more householders in the 55- to 74- year-old group than the rest of the nation.
Job cuts in Georgia could total 5,000 if the airline trims its work force here proportionally to the rest of its nationwide system.
Although the number of cell phones has doubled in the U. S. in the past five years, the number of traffic accidents hasn't gone up proportionally.
If women were proportionally represented, there would be close to 70 female legislators.
If the true mortality rates were lower than we assumed, then the effects observed would be proportionally less.
For one thing, proportionally, he has not published nearly as many works on criminal procedure as he has on other subjects.
In the near future, therefore, many more children, proportionally as well as in absolute numbers, will in all likelihood live in the developing world.
Since individual environmental variance also subsumes measurement errors, the heritability and effect of family environment are proportionally deflated by the value of the reliability.
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