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A Writer's Dictionary:

think little of something or someone Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with T » thickset ... tholepin » think little of something or someone


little
adj littler, littlest
    1. Small in size, extent or amount.
      Thesaurus: small, diminutive, tiny, miniature, dwarfish, elfin; infinitesimal, minuscule, imperceptible; limited, slight, insufficient, cramped.
    2. Young; younger.
      Example: a little girl
      Example: her little brother
    3. Small in importance.
      Example: a little mishap
    4. Trivial or petty.
      Example: a little misunderstanding
      Example: a little disagreement
      Thesaurus: insignificant, petty, unimportant, trivial.
    5. Used as a way of detracting from a potentially disparaging implication: not troublesome.
      Example: funny little ways
    6. Small-minded or mean.
      Example: He's a little liar
adverb
    less, least
    1. Not much or at all.
      Example: They little understood the implications
pronoun
    1. Not much.
      Example: little to be gained from that course of action
Idiom: a little
    Note: with a noun such as bit, while, way understood but not expressed
    A small amount.
      Example: do a little to help out
    A short time.
      Example: He'll be here in a little
    A short distance.
      Example: down the road a little
    A small degree or extent.
      Example: run around a little to keep warm
Idiom: little by little
    Gradually; by degrees.
Idiom: make little of something
    To treat it as unimportant or trivial.
    To understand only a little of it.
Idiom: think little of something or someone
    To have a low opinion of it or them; to disapprove of it or them.
Idiom: not a little
Etymology: Anglo-Saxon lytel.



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