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Small   /smɔl/   Listen
Small

adjective
(compar. smaller; superl. smallest)
1.
Limited or below average in number or quantity or magnitude or extent.  Synonym: little.  "A little house" , "A small car" , "A little (or small) group"
2.
Limited in size or scope.  Synonyms: minor, modest, pocket-size, pocket-sized, small-scale.  "A newspaper with a modest circulation" , "Small-scale plans" , "A pocket-size country"
3.
(of children and animals) young, immature.  Synonym: little.  "Small children"
4.
Slight or limited; especially in degree or intensity or scope.
5.
Low or inferior in station or quality.  Synonyms: humble, low, lowly, modest.  "A lowly parish priest" , "A modest man of the people" , "Small beginnings"
6.
Lowercase.  Synonyms: little, minuscule.  "Small a" , "E.e.cummings's poetry is written all in minuscule letters"
7.
(of a voice) faint.  Synonym: little.  "A still small voice"
8.
Have fine or very small constituent particles.
9.
Not large but sufficient in size or amount.  Synonym: modest.  "Modest inflation" , "Helped in my own small way"
10.
Made to seem smaller or less (especially in worth).  Synonyms: belittled, diminished.
noun
1.
The slender part of the back.
2.
A garment size for a small person.
adverb
1.
On a small scale.



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"Small" Quotes from Famous Books



... be in my country, and they begged me to tell them, for I must surely know, as I came from across the great sea. I tried to explain to them that their friends could not have reached my country in small boats; and that there were plenty of islands like Aru all about the sea, which they would be sure to find. Besides, as it was so long ago, the chief and all the people must be dead. But they quite laughed at this idea, and said they were sure they were alive, for they had proof ...
— The Malay Archipelago - Volume II. (of II.) • Alfred Russel Wallace

... granite, or sandstone, to be met with in many places in these hills. They are rough hewn, and generally taper gradually to their tops, which are sometimes neatly rounded off. The tallest stone is usually in the middle, and is occasionally ornamented with a small stone, through the middle of which a hole has beam drilled so that it may fit on the top of the other. At Nongkrem there is a centre stone with a regularly carved top, evidently intended to represent the head of a man. At Umstow, some two miles from Cherrapunji by the cart road, stood ...
— The Khasis • P. R. T. Gurdon

... a Patriarchal Sovereignty, in which I am my self both King and Priest. All great Governments are nothing else but Clusters of these little private Royalties, and therefore I consider the Masters of Families as small Deputy-Governors presiding over the several little Parcels and Divisions of their Fellow Subjects. As I take great pleasure in the Administration of my Government in particular, so I look upon my self not only as a more useful, but as a much greater and happier Man than any Batchelor ...
— The Spectator, Volumes 1, 2 and 3 - With Translations and Index for the Series • Joseph Addison and Richard Steele

... after a fleeting pause, with a plainer note of good-fellowship than he had ever heard in her voice before. "Delightful," she said gayly. "But I'm not sure that I quite understand the—the precise connection of morning-dress and dinner in a small room with the project." He nodded pleased comprehension of the spirit in which she took him. "Just a whim," he explained. "The things I've got in mind don't fit at all with ceremony, and that big barn of a room, and men standing about. ...
— The Market-Place • Harold Frederic

... am wandering. We were speaking of the Festival. Theodore Thomas is certainly a great leader. What a pity he is out of politics. He pounded the air all up fine there, Thursday. I think he has 25 small-size fiddles, 10 medium-size, and 5 of those big, fat ones that a bald-headed man generally annoys. Then there were a lot of wind instruments, drums, et cetera. There were 600 performers on the stage, counting ...
— Remarks • Bill Nye


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