relative
adjective
- comparing to another
noun
- person with a familial relationship
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈɹɛl.ə.tɪv/ / /rɪˈleː.ʈɪʋ/
adj
Etymology: From Middle French relatif, from Late Latin relātīvus, from Latin relātus, perfect passive participle of referō (“to carry back, to ascribe”), from re- (“again”) + ferō (“to bear or carry”). By surface analysis, relate + -ive.
- Connected to or depending on something else; comparative.
“We've been discussing the relative merits of various methods of transportation.”
“I once knew a case—possibly I read of it—where a pack of cards lay on the floor. It was a murder case and the guilt or innocence of an accused man depended on the relative positions of the fifty-first and fifty-second cards.”
- Expressed in relation to another item, rather than in complete form.
“The relative URL /images/pic.jpg, when evaluated in the context of http://example.com/index.html, corresponds to the absolute URL http://example.com/images/pic.jpg.”
- Depending on an antecedent; comparative.
“The words “big” and “small” are relative.”
- Having the same key but differing in being major or minor.
- Relevant; pertinent; related.
“relative to your earlier point about taxes, ...”
“The Spirit that I haue ſeene May be the Diuell, and the Diuel hath power T'aſſume a pleaſing ſhape, yea and perhaps Out of my Weakneſſe, and my Melancholly, As he is very potent with ſuch Spirits, Abuſes me to damne me. Ile haue grounds More Relatiue then this: The play's the thing, Wherein Ile catch the Conſcience of the King.”
- Capable to be changed by other beings or circumstance; conditional.
adv
Etymology: From Middle French relatif, from Late Latin relātīvus, from Latin relātus, perfect passive participle of referō (“to carry back, to ascribe”), from re- (“again”) + ferō (“to bear or carry”). By surface analysis, relate + -ive.
- Alternative form of relatively.
“In 1924 it moved to a commonious campus at Stockton. Like other Californian colleges, however, it decided to remain a relative small institution.”
“Mr. Schneebell. Instead of the relative small number of cases, you should phrase it probably differently. Professor Brazer. I accept that correction.”
noun
Etymology: From Middle French relatif, from Late Latin relātīvus, from Latin relātus, perfect passive participle of referō (“to carry back, to ascribe”), from re- (“again”) + ferō (“to bear or carry”). By surface analysis, relate + -ive.
- Someone connected by blood, marriage, or adoption; someone in the same family.
“The eldest son was usually given the name of his paternal grandfather, later children those of other relatives.”
“In 2008, the leader of a pro-government union accused Flores of nepotism after she reportedly hired at least 40 relatives to work within the National Assembly.”
- Something kindred or related to something else.
- A type of adjective that inflects like a relative clause, rather than a true adjective, in certain Bantu languages.