From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishinversein‧verse1 /ˌɪnˈvɜːs◂ $ -ɜːrs◂/ adjective [only before noun] 1 AMOUNTif there is an inverse relationship between two amounts, one gets bigger at the same rate as the other gets smaller Clearly, the amount of money people save increases in inverse proportion to the amount they spend. the inverse relationship between prices and interest rates2 technicalHMT exactly opposite —inversely adverb
Examples from the Corpus
inverse• By implication it is impossible to postulate any definite inverse correlation between changes in the real wage rate and changes in employment.• An inverse method for the calculation of stability boundaries is also discussed.• The inverse relationship between living costs and childbearing is found throughout the developing world.• In short, there is a negative or inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded.• Thus, there is also an inverse relationship between the rate of inflation and the real demand for money.• The face was in inverse relief, with the features concave rather than convex, as for a mold.• The temperature at which an inverse solubility occurs is often termed cloud point.• This volume property is characteristic of the inverse square law; it holds for no other law of force.in inverse proportion to• The proliferation of these diminutive shows will soon be in inverse proportion to the theatres still open to receive them.• The scope of personal responsibility expands and contracts in inverse proportion to the extent of the protected interests.• The stridency of their assertions tended to grow in inverse proportion to the extent of their knowledge on costs.• When this is not the case, benefit allocations are in inverse proportion to A's and B's.inverseinverse2 noun [singular] technical OPPOSITE/REVERSEthe complete opposite of something → reverseExamples from the Corpus
inverse• A4 asserts each integer has an additive inverse.• This circle self-inverts; that is, its inverse is the same circle.• One of the more subtle failures is to confuse a block diagram with its inverse.• The concentration of buffering substances in a solution is expressed in terms of alkalinity, the inverse of acidity.• It is the inverse of the liquidity ratio. 4.• Yes, this is the inverse of what is known as the mutation rate, and it can be measured.• The monuments that were created around this war, however, were largely the inverse of traditional monuments.• If anything, this was the inverse of a restaurant.• The inverse is also true.From Longman Business Dictionaryinversein‧verse /ˌɪnˈvɜːs◂-ɜːrs◂/ adjective in inverse proportion/relation to something used for saying that one thing increases at the same rate as another related thing gets smallerStocks moved in inverse relation to oil prices throughout the day.Origin inverse1 (1400-1500) Latin inversus, past participle of invertere; → INVERT