English » Polish

peer2 [pɪəʳ, Am pɪr] N

1. peer (of equal age):

rówieśnik(-iczka) m (f)

2. peer (of equal status):

równy, -na sobie m, f
to be judged by one's peers

3. peer Brit (noble):

par m

4. peer Brit POL:

hereditary peer N Brit

peer group N SOCIOL

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Then there were the three peers who gave time to journalists spinning another yarn about easy money and expensive freebies.
blogs.telegraph.co.uk
When studied in real-world settings, depressed individuals are actually less accurate and more overconfident in their predictions about the future than their non-depressed peers.
en.wikipedia.org
Many of them felt the need for having means to get reconnected to their peers after leaving schools.
en.wikipedia.org
Students will have an opportunity to collaborate with peers and experts in the industry through blogs, social media and video conferencing.
en.wikipedia.org
She peers out at the world with the washed-out eyes of a hunted animal.
en.wikipedia.org
Parents and peers are "invisible planners" who have power to determine the success of the government's language policy.
en.wikipedia.org
As a result, it ended up with a lower payout ratio and a higher capital ratio than its peers.
www.fool.ca
With client-specific content and conversations in one place, outsiders looking in can easily pick up where their peers left off and take action immediately.
www.huffingtonpost.com
Despite all this, she did have an edge over many of her peers.
www.theatlantic.com
John, still in the barn, peers through the doors to see a firing squad on the other side.
en.wikipedia.org

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