Apedia

Vis à Vis Compared Relation Financial Reporters Worry Loss U.S

word vis-à-vis
definition In relation to or compared with.
eg_sentence Many financial reporters worry about the loss of U.S. economic strength vis-à-vis our principal trading partners.
explanation Vis-à-vis comes from Latin by way of French, where it means literally “face-to-face.” In English it was first used to mean a little horse-drawn carriage in which two people sat opposite each other. From there it acquired various other meanings, such as “dancing partner.” Today it no longer refers to actual physical faces and bodies, but its modern meaning comes from the fact that things that are face-to-face can easily be compared or contrasted. So, for example, a greyhound is very tall vis-à-vis a Scottie, and the Red Sox have often fared badly vis-à-vis the Yankees.
IPA vis-à-vis*

Tags: mwvb::unit:7, mwvb::unit:7:word, mwvb::word, mwvb::word-cloze, mwvb::word-reverse, obsidian_to_anki

Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.

Next card: Visionary ideas person foresight imagination dreamer impractical followers

Previous card: Vista mental view long distant extensive stretch time

Up to card list: Merriam-Webster Vocabulary Builder LITE (English)