competitively
competitively — adverb
1. set at a price that compares well with what other sellers charge, so that custom
set at a price that compares well with what other sellers charge, so that customers are likely to choose your product or service instead of a rival's.
The hotel chain priced its rooms competitively to attract more travelers during the low season.
priced competitively — common collocation for business strategy
Élise found that the local bakery priced its pastries competitively compared to the supermarket chain.
Xiaomi priced its newest smartphone models competitively to win customers from older, more established brands.
Pim decided to price his handmade tables competitively so that young families could afford them.
The airline offers competitively low rates to fill seats on quieter travel days.
- affordably
focuses on being low in price rather than matching rivals
- reasonably
suggests the price is fair, not necessarily beating competitors
- expensively
priced higher than rivals
- uncompetitively
priced so that rivals offer better deals
文法句型
priced competitively
competitively [adjective]
用法筆記
Most commonly paired with the verb 'price' or the adjective 'priced'. The sense only applies to cost and value, not to a person's character or attitude. When you see 'competitively', check the word it modifies — if it is 'priced', 'offered', 'sold', or a cost-related adjective, this sense is the intended one.
常見錯誤
2. in a formal contest where people, groups, or businesses try to win or gain an ad
in a formal contest where people, groups, or businesses try to win or gain an advantage.
The two construction firms bid competitively for the contract to build the new hospital wing.
bid competitively — describes a formal tendering process
Six schools from the region took part competitively in the science contest at city hall.
Caleb trained every morning and ran competitively in the regional race last November.
The teams played competitively but respected the referees' calls throughout the entire match.
Talented young violinists perform competitively at national music festivals across the country each spring.
- in competition
phrase form, same meaning
- as rivals
emphasises the opposing sides
- cooperatively
working together rather than against each other
- unopposed
without anyone to compete against
文法句型
[verb] competitively
compete/play/bid/perform competitively
用法筆記
This is the most neutral sense — it simply states that an activity is set up as a contest. It does not imply strong emotion, hostility, or a personal desire to win. Distinguish it from sense 3, which describes a person's inner drive; sense 3 would sound odd with formal processes such as 'bid' or 'award'.
常見錯誤
3. showing a strong inner desire to outperform everyone else and come out ahead, in
showing a strong inner desire to outperform everyone else and come out ahead, in any activity — even when there is no official prize or score.
Adina behaves competitively even during simple board games with her cousins at family gatherings.
behaves competitively — personal trait, not a formal contest
Defne, aged six, acts competitively when playing board games with her cousins because she seeks her parents' attention and approval.
Kemi plays tennis competitively, pushing herself to improve her serve and footwork every single week.
Christopher worked competitively to rank first in his end-of-year exams after joining the new school.
Bao climbed the mountain competitively, determined to reach the summit before his friends.
- keenly
suggests eagerness rather than a drive to beat others
- ambitiously
focuses on personal success goals rather than outperforming others
- casually
without strong effort or desire to win
- half-heartedly
showing little interest in the outcome
文法句型
[verb] competitively
act/behave/play competitively
用法筆記
Describes a person's inner drive, not the structure of the situation. Distinguish from sense 2, where the context names an official contest (a bid, a tournament, a race). Here the activity may be informal — a board game, a school exam, or a mountain climb — but the person treats it as a contest because of their own attitude.