We have no meanings for "slight disadvantage" in our records yet.
1 I admit he has the slight disadvantage of being, beyond all question, off his head.
2 To use your own eloquent language, you have the ' slight disadvantage ' of being off your head.
3 It did have the slight disadvantage , however, of a bullet ricocheting back and killing the pilot.
4 However I'm at a slight disadvantage , and so far as I don't know what they look like.
5 The 60 min score showed the opposite effect, possibly indicating a slight disadvantage of the topical anaesthesia.
6 I realize that we are at a slight disadvantage without weapons, but we still have surprise on our side.'
7 Electric cars are at a slight disadvantage on the Nürburgring, because they are heavier than comparable sized petrol vehicles.
8 The trick works even if those alleles put their owner at a slight disadvantage when the parasite is not present.
9 The slight disadvantage involved by the modern improved arrester is not to be compared with the importance of the safety acquired.
10 Had he not taken the chap at a slight disadvantage in getting the first hold, the stranger would have been his master.
11 Not only will it be very easy to create a little friction, you could find that this drive puts you at a slight disadvantage !
12 On account of the smokeless powder they used, the Spanish batteries could not be precisely located, so our own artillery were at a slight disadvantage .
13 "It is but having you, let us say, at a slight disadvantage ; and now I think I may move."
14 420 was placed at a slight disadvantage in the re-learning series by an interruption of the training between the seventh and the eighth series.
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Slight disadvantage through the time